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Official statement

Content hidden behind tabs or collapsible sections may be downrated in indexing, and it's preferable to display important content visibly.
50:07
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h06 💬 EN 📅 05/12/2014 ✂ 20 statements
Watch on YouTube (50:07) →
Other statements from this video 19
  1. 3:08 Pourquoi la balise canonical ne fonctionne-t-elle pas instantanément ?
  2. 4:10 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il vos balises rel=canonical pourtant correctement implémentées ?
  3. 5:46 Faut-il vraiment optimiser vos titres pour l'affichage mobile ?
  4. 7:10 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les versions www et non-www de votre site ?
  5. 7:11 Comment Google consolide-t-il vraiment les signaux entre vos différentes versions de site ?
  6. 8:27 Comment Google raccourcit-il les titres sur mobile et que faire pour garder le contrôle ?
  7. 10:48 Un nom de domaine exact (EMD) suffit-il encore à bien ranker ?
  8. 11:47 La structure d'URL plate ou en dossiers : vraiment aucun impact sur le SEO ?
  9. 12:02 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter de la structure de ses URLs pour le référencement ?
  10. 20:01 Comment Google Penguin détecte-t-il vraiment les liens malveillants sur votre site ?
  11. 20:08 Penguin peut-il vraiment distinguer les mauvais liens que vous recevez malgré vous ?
  12. 40:49 Les commentaires utilisateurs influencent-ils vraiment le classement d'une page ?
  13. 44:49 Comment un nouveau site peut-il vraiment percer dans un marché saturé ?
  14. 50:06 Le contenu masqué derrière des onglets ou accordéons est-il pénalisé par Google ?
  15. 51:24 A quelle vitesse les algorithmes de Google se mettent-ils vraiment à jour ?
  16. 51:52 Comment fonctionnent réellement les cycles de rafraîchissement des algorithmes Google ?
  17. 54:16 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le ranking Google ?
  18. 58:36 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
  19. 99:29 Faut-il encore utiliser rel=alternate et rel=canonical pour un site mobile en sous-domaine m. ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google downrates content hidden in tabs or accordions during indexing. This practice, stemming from mobile-first indexing, prioritizes directly visible information. For SEO, this means critical elements (keywords, semantic context) should be displayed outside of these hidden areas, while still keeping accordions for secondary UX. The line between downrating and penalization remains unclear.

What you need to understand

Why does Google downrate hidden content?

The mobile-first indexing has changed the game. Google now crawls sites primarily from a mobile viewport, where screen space is limited. Content hidden behind interactions (tabs, accordions) has historically been suspicious: cloaking, keyword stuffing that is invisible to the user.

Today, the engine technically indexes this content — it reads it from the DOM — but gives it less weight. The logic is: if you hide the information, it must be secondary. Google evaluates contextual relevance based on immediate visibility.

What’s the difference between “downrating” and “penalization”?

Downrating means the content is indexed but less prioritized in ranking calculations. It's not a manual penalty, rather a reduced weighting coefficient. A penalization involves an algorithmic or manual action that massively removes or degrades rankings.

In practical terms, text in a tab can still rank, but it will have less semantic impact than a visible paragraph at the top of the page. Google prioritizes what the user sees at first glance, without a click or scroll.

When are tabs considered acceptable?

Tabbed interfaces are not banned. Google understands modern UX constraints: e-commerce product pages, structured FAQs, technical sheets. The problem arises when you bury the main keywords or the central semantic context in them.

If your visible content is sufficient to establish the theme and value of the page, tabs can host complementary details without major harm. The mistake is placing the main product description in a closed default accordion.

  • Mobile-first indexing: Google assesses visibility based on the smartphone viewport.
  • Hidden content: indexed but with reduced semantic weight in ranking.
  • UX vs SEO: tabs are tolerated for secondary information, not for critical elements.
  • No manual penalty: downrating is algorithmic and gradual, not binary.
  • Semantic structure: visible content must be sufficient to set the complete thematic context.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes and no. In A/B tests conducted on e-commerce sites, it is indeed observed that moving a block of text from an accordion to a visible area at the top of the page improves rankings on long-tail queries. The gain is measurable but rarely spectacular: between 5 and 15% additional organic traffic on the affected pages.

However, entire sites structured in tabs (SaaS, comparison sites) continue to rank well if their semantic markup (schema.org, Hn titles) and internal linking are solid. Downrating is therefore not systematic or binary. [To be verified]: Google has never published a quantified coefficient for this downrating.

What nuances should be noted about this rule?

Mueller's statement remains deliberately vague. “May be downrated” is not the same as “will be penalized”. This means that other signals (backlinks, CTR, Core Web Vitals, freshness) can largely compensate for this loss of semantic weight.

An authoritative site with solid backlinks can afford to have tabs on its product sheets without catastrophe. A young site, low in authority, will suffer from the impact more. The margin of maneuver depends on your link profile and your industry competitiveness.

When does this rule not apply?

Structured FAQs in schema.org partially escape this logic. Google displays this content in rich snippets even if they're in accordions because it recognizes the structured markup. The engine knows it's a standard UX convention, not cloaking.

Likewise, product navigation tabs (customer reviews, technical specs, delivery) on consolidated e-commerce platforms (Amazon, Cdiscount) do not seem to suffer. Their domain authority and user signal volume (conversions, time on page) compensate. For an average site, it’s a different story.

Warning: If you migrate visible content to tabs, monitor Search Console for 4 to 6 weeks. A drop in impressions on secondary queries may indicate that Google has reduced the semantic weight of these sections.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do practically on an existing site?

Audit your strategic pages (those generating traffic or that you want to rank). Identify hidden content: accordions, tabs, dropdown menus. Extract the key elements (main keywords, semantic context, sales pitch) and move them to the visible area without interaction.

You can keep tabs for secondary information: detailed legal mentions, warranty conditions, size charts. The goal is for Google to capture the essential theme from the initial rendering, without JavaScript or clicks.

What mistakes to avoid during a UX redesign?

Don't sacrifice user experience on the altar of SEO. A wall of text without breathing space drives visitors away, increases bounce rates, and Google detects this through behavioral signals. Find a balance: a visible introductory paragraph, then developed sections that are accessible (but not hidden by default).

Avoid also duplicating visible content AND content in tabs to “force” indexing. Google may interpret this as keyword stuffing or artificial content. A single, well-placed version is sufficient.

How to check the impact of a structural change?

Use Google Search Console to track the evolution of impressions and positions on targeted queries. Compare before/after over a minimum 30-day period. A tool like Screaming Frog can crawl your site in mobile mode to find content not visible in the initial rendering.

You can also test with Google's Mobile-Friendly Test: it displays the rendering as Googlebot sees it. If your critical content does not appear in the screenshot, it is probably underweighted.

  • Identify strategic pages with hidden content (accordions, tabs)
  • Extract keywords and semantic context to a visible area without interaction
  • Retain tabs only for secondary details (specs, reviews, complementary FAQs)
  • Markup FAQs with schema.org if they remain in accordions
  • Monitor Search Console for 4-6 weeks after migration
  • Check mobile rendering with Mobile-Friendly Test or Screaming Frog
Displaying critical content visibly is a straightforward optimization, but time-consuming if your site has hundreds of pages. Balancing UX and SEO demands a fine analysis of user journeys and Search Console data. For these structural redesigns, assistance from a specialized SEO agency can accelerate compliance and limit traffic loss risks during the transition.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les accordéons de FAQ sont-ils pénalisés par Google ?
Non, si tu utilises le balisage schema.org FAQPage. Google affiche ces contenus en rich snippets même masqués. Sans balisage structuré, ils sont indexés mais moins prioritaires.
Un contenu en onglet est-il quand même crawlé et indexé ?
Oui, Google crawle le DOM complet, y compris les contenus masqués par CSS ou JavaScript. Mais il leur accorde un poids sémantique réduit dans le calcul de pertinence.
Faut-il supprimer tous les onglets de mon site e-commerce ?
Non. Garde-les pour les détails secondaires (avis, livraison, specs techniques). Affiche uniquement la description produit principale et les arguments de vente en zone visible.
Comment savoir si mes onglets impactent mon ranking ?
Teste en déplaçant le contenu d'un onglet vers le haut de page sur quelques URL pilotes. Compare les positions et impressions dans Search Console après 4 semaines. Un gain valide l'hypothèse.
Les menus déroulants de navigation sont-ils aussi concernés ?
Moins, car Google différencie navigation (structure du site) et contenu éditorial. Les menus sont crawlés pour le maillage interne, mais leur contenu textuel n'a pas de poids sémantique fort.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Crawl & Indexing Pagination & Structure Local Search

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