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Official statement

Google takes manual actions against abusive rich snippets. There is a spam report form for rich snippets, and if a manual action is taken, it can disable all rich snippets for the concerned site.
8:47
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:14 💬 EN 📅 06/09/2016 ✂ 12 statements
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Other statements from this video 11
  1. 2:09 Faut-il regrouper vos contenus sur une page pilier ou les éclater en pages distinctes ?
  2. 5:13 Pourquoi Google ne communique-t-il pas sur toutes ses mises à jour d'algorithme ?
  3. 10:52 Faut-il vraiment retirer toutes les URLs en erreur 404 douce de votre sitemap ?
  4. 11:39 Faut-il créer des pages séparées pour chaque couleur de produit en e-commerce ?
  5. 15:34 Les signaux comportementaux influencent-ils vraiment le classement de vos pages ?
  6. 15:37 Faut-il vraiment montrer vos deux versions de tests A/B à Googlebot ?
  7. 18:59 Pourquoi vos snippets enrichis validés ne s'affichent-ils pas dans les SERP ?
  8. 18:59 Les rich snippets dépendent-ils vraiment de la qualité globale du site ?
  9. 21:43 Rel=canonical suffit-il vraiment à gérer le contenu dupliqué entre plusieurs sites ?
  10. 35:55 Comment garantir que Google indexe réellement vos contenus JavaScript ?
  11. 54:28 Google choisit-il vraiment l'URL canonique sans impact sur le classement ?
📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google has a reporting form for abusive rich snippets and can take manual actions against offending sites. The practical consequence: a single manual penalty can disable all rich snippets on a site, even those that are perfectly compliant. The rule? A localized abuse can destroy the entire SERP visibility of your domain, making absolute vigilance regarding every implementation of structured data imperative.

What you need to understand

What does Google mean by abusive rich snippets?

An abusive rich snippet occurs when a site implements structured data in a misleading, manipulative way, or in non-compliance with the guidelines. Common cases include: marking up invisible content to the user, artificially inflating review scores, displaying non-existent or outdated prices, or using FAQ markup to stuff keywords without real informative value.

Google maintains a dedicated spam reporting form for rich snippets, signaling a commitment to address this issue with the same rigor as other forms of manipulation. Unlike automated systems that may simply ignore invalid markup, a manual action involves a human review and a deliberate sanction.

Why does Google take such a radical total deactivation approach?

The logic of Google is based on a domain trust principle. If your site abuses rich snippets in one section, the quality team believes that the entire domain has lost its credibility in terms of structured data. This punitive approach aims to discourage borderline practices.

This complete deactivation creates a powerful leverage effect: even if 95% of your markups are perfect, the 5% that are abusive can compromise everything. It forces SEOs to audit all of their implementations instead of pushing boundaries on a few strategic pages.

Which snippets are affected by this policy?

All types of rich snippets fall under this rule: product reviews, FAQs, recipes, events, articles, job listings, videos, breadcrumbs. The sanction does not differentiate between types of markup—once the manual action is triggered, it’s a blanket deactivation.

An important nuance: Google can technically target certain types of snippets in Search Console, but Mueller speaks here about a global deactivation. In practice, we indeed see sites losing all their rich results simultaneously after a manual action, even when the initial abuse was only concerning one type of structured data.

  • Manual action distinct from automatic algorithmic filters that simply ignore invalid markups
  • Total deactivation of rich snippets for the entire domain, not just the problematic pages
  • Public reporting form allowing competitors or users to trigger a manual review
  • Possible restoration through a re-evaluation request after correction, but a slow process with no guarantee
  • Mandatory prevention: complete audit of structured data before deployment, no testing in production on live site

SEO Expert opinion

Is this threat of total deactivation really enforced?

Yes, and field observations confirm it. I have documented several cases of e-commerce sites suddenly losing their product review stars, displayed prices, and FAQs, following a manual action triggered by an abusive markup in one category. Search Console then displays a generic notification without always detailing precisely which snippet triggered the sanction.

The problem: Google does not communicate a tolerance threshold. A site can have 10,000 perfectly marked pages and be penalized for 50 borderline pages. This lack of proportionality creates ongoing uncertainty for large sites with multiple teams implementing markups without central coordination.

What borderline practices really trigger a manual action?

Flagrant abuses are obvious: fake reviews, fictional prices, FAQs generated automatically without value. But the gray area is large. Marking up a FAQ that slightly paraphrases the visible content? Using Product markup on a category page that aggregates multiple products? Displaying an AggregateRating based on unverified external reviews?

Honestly, Google does not provide a clear red line. The official guidelines remain deliberately vague on these borderline cases, leaving a dangerous margin for interpretation. My advice: if you find yourself asking, “Is this acceptable?”, it’s probably too risky to justify the marginal gain in CTR. [To be verified]: Google claims to treat each case manually, but the volume of reports suggests an algorithmic pre-filtering phase—some sites seem penalized more quickly than others without a clear explanation.

Is the reporting form used as a competitive weapon?

Absolutely, and this is a real problem. Since Google made this form public, there have been mass reporting campaigns among competitors in certain sectors (finance, health, e-commerce). A malicious actor can easily report a competitor's snippets even when they are compliant, forcing Google to review the site.

Even if the site is clean, this manual review consumes time and creates a risk of false positives. Some SEOs report temporarily losing their snippets while Google finalizes its review, even when no final action was taken. This weaponization of the form turns a quality tool into a vector for negative SEO, and Google does not provide any protection against this misuse.

Alert: If you operate in an aggressively competitive sector, audit your structured data with extreme rigor. A motivated competitor can trigger a manual review at any time, and even an interpretative doubt about your markups can be enough to justify a temporary deactivation.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I audit my structured data to avoid a sanction?

First reflex: use Google’s rich results test tool on a representative sample of templates. But don’t stop there—this tool validates the technical syntax, not the editorial compliance. You must manually check that each marked-up data point corresponds exactly to the content visible to the user.

Focus on high-risk areas: automatically generated pages, content aggregations, template FAQs. Ensure your AggregateRatings reflect real, traceable reviews, that your prices are up to date and consistent with the checkout, and that your FAQs provide real value rather than recycling the page content.

What should I do if my site receives a manual action on snippets?

First step: identify precisely which markup triggered the sanction. Google does not always provide the detail, so you'll need to cross-reference the action date with your recent deployments and examine the types of snippets you were displaying before the deactivation. Start with the most recent or aggressive ones.

Next, fix not only the problematic markup but also audit all similar templates—Google expects a systemic correction, not a localized patch. Submit a reevaluation request via Search Console documenting clearly the corrections made. Be aware that the processing time can take several weeks, and reactivation is never guaranteed even after complete correction.

What preventive measures should I implement right now?

Establish a validation process before any deployment of structured data: technical test + editorial review + compliance check against guidelines. On large sites, appoint a single responsible person to validate all markups, thus avoiding anarchic implementations by different teams.

Set up continuous monitoring: Search Console alerts on manual actions, weekly monitoring of snippet displays in SERPs for your strategic queries, comprehensive quarterly audits of templates. If you detect a sudden drop in rich results display without notification of a manual action, investigate immediately—sometimes Google silently deactivates certain snippets before formalizing a sanction.

  • Audit 100% of templates generating structured data, not just a sample
  • Check exact correspondence between markup and visible user content
  • Remove any markup on invisible content, dynamically generated without validation, or aggregated without clear sourcing
  • Document the source of each AggregateRating and ensure its traceability
  • Manually test user journeys to confirm that data displayed in SERPs matches the real user experience
  • Establish centralized governance of structured data with mandatory validation prior to deployment
Total deactivation of rich snippets following a manual action represents a major risk for SERP visibility. Google's radical approach imposes absolute rigor on all your structured data implementations. These technical optimizations and total compliance of a site can quickly become complex, especially on multi-template architectures or extensive catalogs. If you identify risk areas or if your team lacks resources to audit all your markups, consulting an SEO agency specialized in structured data may help you avoid costly sanctions and speed up compliance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une action manuelle sur les snippets enrichis affecte-t-elle le positionnement organique ?
Non, l'action manuelle désactive uniquement l'affichage des rich snippets dans les SERP. Vos positions organiques restent théoriquement inchangées, mais la perte de visibilité en SERP (étoiles, prix, FAQ) impacte mécaniquement votre CTR et donc indirectement votre trafic.
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une demande de réexamen soit traitée ?
Les délais varient de quelques jours à plusieurs semaines selon la charge de l'équipe qualité. En pratique, compter 2-4 semaines en moyenne. Aucune garantie que la demande soit acceptée même après correction complète des markups problématiques.
Peut-on perdre ses snippets sans recevoir de notification dans la Search Console ?
Oui, certains sites rapportent une disparition progressive de leurs rich results sans action manuelle formelle notifiée. Google peut techniquement ignorer des markups jugés problématiques sans déclencher de sanction officielle, surtout dans les phases de test de nouveaux filtres.
Les données structurées sur un sous-domaine peuvent-elles affecter le domaine principal ?
Google traite généralement les sous-domaines comme des entités distinctes pour les actions manuelles. Toutefois, si l'abus est systémique et révèle une pratique délibérée, rien n'empêche une extension de la sanction à l'ensemble des propriétés du même propriétaire.
Faut-il supprimer toutes les données structurées en attendant le réexamen ?
Non, corrige uniquement les markups abusifs identifiés et documente ces corrections dans ta demande de réexamen. Supprimer l'intégralité des données structurées n'accélère pas le traitement et te prive de snippets potentiellement valides sur d'autres sections du site.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Penalties & Spam Search Console

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