Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 4:11 Faut-il vraiment stabiliser vos fichiers sitemap pour optimiser le crawl ?
- 6:05 Le CDN peut-il tuer votre crawl budget sans prévenir ?
- 11:21 Le responsive design est-il vraiment indispensable pour survivre au mobile-first indexing ?
- 14:05 Les PWA sont-elles vraiment plus complexes que l'AMP pour le SEO ?
- 23:46 Faut-il vraiment indexer toutes vos pages de pagination ?
- 32:21 Mettre à jour les dates de publication améliore-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 38:57 Les balises hreflang diluent-elles réellement l'autorité de vos pages principales ?
- 52:42 La structure d'URL a-t-elle vraiment un impact sur le classement Google ?
- 59:05 La publicité Google Ads influence-t-elle vraiment le référencement naturel ?
- 67:49 La densité de mots-clés est-elle encore un critère SEO en 2025 ?
- 71:25 Pourquoi les chiffres d'indexation de la Search Console contredisent-ils la requête site: ?
Google confirms that AMP is not a prerequisite for ranking, but it remains an effective technical solution for speeding up loading through caching and pre-rendering. The SEO impact comes from improved page speed, which is an indirect ranking factor. For sites with limited technical resources, AMP offers a turnkey optimization, but is no longer the only viable option since the introduction of Core Web Vitals.
What you need to understand
Is AMP still a relevant performance lever?
The AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) framework was launched by Google as a technical solution to drastically speed up mobile page loading. The promise: simplified HTML, limited JavaScript, and above all a caching on Google's servers that allows for nearly instantaneous display.
Mueller's statement makes a key point: AMP is not mandatory for visibility in search results. Thus, the myth that refusing AMP penalizes your indexing is debunked. What Google values is actual speed, regardless of the technology used to achieve it.
What makes AMP technically interesting for SEO?
Three technical mechanisms empower AMP. First, the pre-rendering of pages in search results: Google prepares the page even before the user clicks, reducing the Time To Interactive to just a few milliseconds. Next, the CDN caching distributed across Google's infrastructure eliminates server latency.
Finally, AMP's strict technical constraints (limited JavaScript, controlled inline CSS, native lazy-loading of images) ensure an architecture optimized by design. It's impossible to create a slow AMP page; the framework rejects any code that blocks rendering.
Why does Mueller specifically mention sites with limited resources?
This clarification is not insignificant. Optimizing the speed of a traditional site requires mastering server caching, custom lazy-loading, minification, critical CSS, JavaScript code splitting, and a performant CDN infrastructure. This is a significant technical undertaking that requires both expertise and budget.
AMP provides a turnkey alternative: you adhere to the framework's specs, and performance follows automatically. For web writing with limited technical resources, publishing in AMP ensures correct Lighthouse scores without deep expertise. The downside? You lose in design and functional flexibility.
- AMP is not a direct ranking factor but improves speed, which influences SEO
- Google's caching and pre-rendering offer a competitive advantage on Time To Interactive
- The framework is suitable for sites with limited technical resources to achieve good performance
- AMP constraints limit the creative and functional possibilities of pages
- Since the Core Web Vitals, other technologies (PWA, static site generators) offer viable alternatives
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement reflect what we observe in practice?
Yes and no. A/B testing on media sites shows that AMP pages do indeed rank well, but not necessarily better than a well-optimized standard page. The true advantage of AMP can be measured in CTR from mobile SERPs: the « ⚡ » badge and instant display drive click-through rates that are 15 to 25% higher depending on the vertical.
Where Mueller remains vague is on the notion of ‘potentially impacting SEO’. [To verify] No direct correlation between AMP adoption and improved rankings has been demonstrated on a large scale. What matters is the actual speed measured through Core Web Vitals, not the mere use of AMP.
What nuances should be considered regarding this recommendation?
First point: AMP has lost its strategic interest since Google abandoned the AMP-only Top Stories carousel. Previously, AMP articles enjoyed premium placement in mobile news. Now, any fast page can access it.
Second nuance: saying that AMP is ‘effective for sites with limited resources’ implies that these sites accept the strict constraints of the framework. No complex forms, limited third-party JavaScript, restricted analytics tracking, and constrained advertising monetization. For an e-commerce or SaaS site, AMP quickly becomes incompatible with business needs.
In what cases does this solution not apply?
AMP remains relevant for pure editorial sites: media, blogs, online magazines primarily featuring text with some images and videos. The framework perfectly meets this simple use case.
However, forget about AMP if you're managing an e-commerce site with Ajax filters, product comparators, interactive configurators, or any functionality requiring complex custom JavaScript. The same goes for SaaS platforms, community sites with rich comments, or progressive web apps. In these contexts, investing in traditional technical optimization (Next.js, smart caching, premium CDN) will always be more cost-efficient.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you still invest in AMP for your site?
The answer depends on your technical and editorial context. If you run a media or blog site with a small technical team and a CMS that natively supports AMP (WordPress via official plugin, Drupal, etc.), implementation remains relevant for gaining speed without deep expertise.
Conversely, if you have sufficient technical resources, prioritize the direct optimization of your standard pages: static site generation, server-side rendering, optimizing Core Web Vitals via Lighthouse. This way, you retain all functional freedom without the constraints of AMP.
How can you measure if AMP truly improves your SEO performance?
First step: compare your Core Web Vitals AMP vs non-AMP in the Search Console. If your standard pages already show green on LCP, FID, and CLS, AMP will only bring a marginal gain. However, if you're in the orange or red, AMP may serve as a temporary solution while you optimize the main site.
Second indicator: analyze the mobile click-through rate on your AMP pages via Google Analytics with custom segments. If the CTR from mobile SERPs rises significantly (>10%), this indicates that the instant display is doing its job. Otherwise, you're maintaining infrastructure for negligible benefit.
What mistakes should be avoided when implementing AMP?
Common mistake: implementing AMP on the entire site by default without considering which pages would really benefit. Focus AMP on editorial content that has high organic mobile traffic, not on product pages or landing pages with heavy JavaScript.
Another pitfall: neglecting correct canonicalization. Each AMP page must point to its canonical standard version via rel=canonical, and conversely, the classic version must declare the AMP via rel=amphtml. An error here creates cannibalization and duplicate content in the index.
- Audit your current Core Web Vitals before deciding to adopt AMP
- Limit AMP to simple editorial content, not interactive features
- Check the rel=canonical and rel=amphtml configuration in both directions
- Test AMP rendering with the official Google AMP Test tool before publishing
- Track AMP vs standard metrics separately in Analytics (custom segments)
- Document the dual publishing process to maintain editorial consistency
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
AMP améliore-t-il directement le positionnement dans Google ?
Dois-je maintenir deux versions de mon site (AMP et classique) ?
AMP fonctionne-t-il pour un site e-commerce ?
Le badge éclair AMP dans les résultats améliore-t-il le CTR ?
Peut-on utiliser Google Analytics normalement sur des pages AMP ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h12 · published on 02/02/2018
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