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Official statement

It is normal for a product to be internally linked with the same product name as anchor text (98% identical). Depending on the CMS, this occurs naturally. Google does not automatically penalize this repetition of internal anchor text if it is natural and related to the site's structure.
40:12
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:01 💬 EN 📅 13/05/2020 ✂ 22 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that an internal anchor text repeated 98% for the same product is not penalized if this repetition naturally arises from the site's structure or CMS. This statement questions past practices of over-variation of internal anchors, which were often artificial. Essentially, there’s no need to force variations if your linking reflects a consistent naming logic.

What you need to understand

Why does this statement contradict common beliefs?

For years, the SEO community applied the same rules to internal anchors as to external backlinks: diversify at all costs to avoid over-optimization. This approach was based on the assumption that Google would penalize any excessive repetition, even internally.

Mueller breaks this logic. If your e-commerce links the product "Nike Air Zoom running shoes" 300 times with exactly that text as anchor, it’s perfectly natural. The CMS generates these links automatically — product sheets, breadcrumbs, recommendation widgets. Forcing variations like "Nike shoes", "Air Zoom for running", "running shoe Nike" would be artificial and counterproductive.

What’s the difference between internal and external anchors?

External backlinks remain subject to a diversification logic, as a profile of too homogeneous anchors often signals spam or aggressive link building. Google monitors these patterns closely.

In contrast, internal linking follows an architecture and navigation logic. If your site sells "iPhone 15 Pro Max 256GB", this name should appear wherever the product is mentioned — in menus, filters, crosspaths. Artificial variation would dilute semantic coherence and degrade user experience.

What does “natural and related to the site structure” actually mean?

Mueller sets a condition: repetition must be logical and systemic, not forced. If your CMS automatically generates identical anchors for each occurrence of a product, Google sees that as normal.

However, if you manually stuff 50 anchors "best divorce lawyer Paris" into your internal pages without structural reason, you cross into deliberate over-optimization. The boundary? Intention: does this repetition serve the user or just ranking?

  • Natural repetition: same product name everywhere it is referenced (CMS, breadcrumb, widgets)
  • Forced repetition: keyword-stuffed anchors manually inserted into inappropriate contexts
  • Blurred limit: Google does not provide a defined threshold — “natural” remains subjective and contextual
  • UX impact: if repetition degrades readability or seems robotic, it’s probably too much
  • Industry difference: e-commerce tolerates more repetition than a content blog where each link is contextualized

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, but with nuances. Well-structured e-commerce sites with identical product anchors do not visibly suffer penalty, provided their linking is logical. Google's algorithms seem capable of distinguishing systemic repetition (CMS-driven) from manual manipulation.

However, [To be verified]: Mueller does not specify the threshold or context at which repetition becomes problematic. A site with 10,000 pages all linking to the same page with the exact same commercial anchor — is that still “natural”? The answer likely depends on the link/content ratio, thematic relevance, and the overall site profile.

What nuances should be added to this rule?

Mueller's statement primarily applies to product names, categories, or fixed entities — elements that, by nature, always carry the same name. It does not justify keyword stuffing of optimized anchors for generic queries.

For example: if you sell "trail shoes", linking this category 500 times with exactly "trail shoes" as the anchor is acceptable. On the other hand, if you write 200 blog articles and each contains 3 links to your service page with the anchor "SEO expert Paris", you cross the line. The first case is structural, the second is strategic and manipulative.

In what cases does this rule not protect against over-optimization?

If your internal linking is based on a human editorial logic rather than CMS, Google expects more diversification. A blog that links systematically to its guide "best car insurance" with that exact match anchor in every article would lose credibility.

Another limit: sites with few pages but many concentrated internal links. If 30 pages each link 10 times to the same target with the same anchor, even if it’s "natural" in theory, the algorithm might see this as an artificial boost attempt. Absolute volume is as important as pattern.

Warning: This tolerance does NOT apply to external anchors. A backlink profile with 80% identical anchors remains a spam signal, no matter what "naturalness" is claimed.

Practical impact and recommendations

What practical steps should you take with your internal linking?

Stop artificially over-varying your product or category anchors. If your CMS generates "MacBook Pro M3 14-inch" wherever this product is mentioned, keep it as is. Consistency strengthens the semantic signal and enhances user experience.

However, for editorial links (blog articles, guides, resource pages), continue to contextualize anchors. A link in a sentence like "check out our complete guide on the best SEO tools" is more natural and effective than an abruptly repeated "SEO tools" 50 times.

What mistakes should you avoid in optimizing internal anchors?

Do not confuse structural repetition with manual stuffing. If you manually insert the same keyword-rich anchor 10 times into a long page to boost a targeted URL, you cross the line. The test: would this anchor be there if you weren’t thinking about SEO?

Another trap: varying anchors in an inconsistent or absurd manner to escape an alleged penalty. "Running shoe", "shoe for running", "footwear jogging" — such forced variation degrades clarity and adds nothing. Google prefers logical repetition to clumsy over-engineering.

How to audit your internal linking to spot over-optimizations?

Use a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl, Botify) to extract all your internal anchors and their frequencies. Filter by target URL: if a page receives 200 links with 95% identical anchors, check if it's legitimate (product name, category) or forced (keyword stuffing).

Also, look at the text/link ratio: a 300-word page with 15 identical internal links to the same target suggests manipulation. Compare with your well-positioned competitors — is their linking also homogeneous or more diversified?

  • Extract all internal anchors via a crawler and analyze the distribution by target URL
  • Identify pages receiving >80% identical anchors and check if it’s justified (product, category) or forced
  • Compare the text/link ratio — an abnormal density of identical links in little content is a red flag
  • Audit editorial anchors (blog, guides): prioritize contextualization over mechanical repetition
  • Test UX: if a user finds the repetition odd or robotic, Google will too
  • Monitor ranking fluctuations after adjusting the linking to validate the impact
Internal linking remains a powerful yet delicate lever: Google’s tolerance for repetitive anchors does not exempt a coherent strategy. Between artificial over-variation and anchor stuffing, the balance is delicate. If your architecture audit reveals inconsistencies or if you doubt the “naturalness” of your linking, consulting a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and leverage this tool fully without the risk of over-optimization.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je utiliser la même ancre interne 100 fois sans risque ?
Oui, si cette répétition est naturelle et structurelle (nom de produit, catégorie générée par le CMS). Non, si vous l'insérez manuellement pour manipuler le ranking d'une requête commerciale.
Cette tolérance s'applique-t-elle aussi aux backlinks externes ?
Non. Les ancres externes restent soumises à une logique de diversification. Un profil de backlinks avec 80% d'ancres identiques est toujours un signal de spam pour Google.
Faut-il varier les ancres de mes fiches produit dans un e-commerce ?
Non, gardez le nom exact du produit partout où il est référencé. La cohérence renforce le signal sémantique et améliore l'UX. La sur-variation serait contre-productive.
Comment savoir si ma répétition d'ancres est "naturelle" ou "forcée" ?
Posez-vous la question : cette ancre serait-elle là si je ne pensais pas au SEO ? Si la réponse est non, c'est probablement forcé. Le test UX est aussi valable : si un utilisateur trouve ça bizarre, Google aussi.
Un site de niche avec peu de pages peut-il répéter les mêmes ancres internes ?
Oui, mais avec prudence. Si 20 pages linkent toutes 5 fois vers la même cible avec la même ancre, le ratio devient suspect. Le volume absolu et la densité comptent autant que le pattern.
🏷 Related Topics
E-commerce Links & Backlinks Pagination & Structure

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