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Official statement

Redirects should be implemented in a way that ensures a good user experience and smooth crawling by Google. Use the URL Inspection tool to check that redirects are functioning correctly.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 59:24 💬 EN 📅 01/02/2019 ✂ 11 statements
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Other statements from this video 10
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  2. 9:59 Lighthouse et Chrome UX Report suffisent-ils vraiment pour diagnostiquer vos problèmes de crawl et de rendu ?
  3. 10:03 Les ressources bloquées tuent-elles vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
  4. 13:25 Les sitemaps suffisent-ils vraiment pour indexer des pages API sans maillage interne ?
  5. 16:11 Sitemap et navigation : Google a-t-il vraiment besoin de votre aide pour crawler ?
  6. 27:41 Les sous-domaines sont-ils vraiment évalués indépendamment du domaine principal ?
  7. 32:54 Faut-il vraiment tout refondre après une mise à jour d'algorithme comme Google le suggère ?
  8. 42:52 L'inspection d'URL Search Console suffit-elle vraiment à diagnostiquer tous les blocages techniques ?
  9. 52:19 Comment Google indexe-t-il vraiment le contenu chargé en AJAX et JavaScript ?
  10. 58:20 Le Mobile-Friendly Test est-il vraiment le bon outil pour vérifier l'indexation du contenu dynamique ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that redirects should ensure a smooth user experience and optimal crawling, verifying their functionality through the URL Inspection tool. This position remains intentionally vague about the concrete impact of redirects on PageRank and crawl budget. An SEO practitioner must understand that not all redirects are equal — a chain of 301s, a temporary 302, or a JavaScript redirect will not have the same consequences on your performance.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize user experience so much in redirects?

Google continually emphasizes that user experience is paramount in all technical decisions. Poorly configured redirects can lead to extended load times or navigation errors that drive visitors away.

A user who clicks a link and encounters a redirect loop or a response time exceeding 3 seconds will leave your site without hesitation. Google measures these behavioral signals and incorporates them into its ranking algorithm.

What does Google mean by "smooth crawl" in this context?

A smooth crawl means that Googlebot does not waste its budget following unnecessary or poorly configured redirects. Each HTTP request consumes time and resources — a chain of three redirects to reach the final page triples the crawl cost.

Google favors sites that minimize jumps between the entry URL and the final destination. A direct 301 redirect to the target page will always be preferable to a chain involving several temporary intermediaries.

Is the URL Inspection tool really enough to diagnose issues?

The Search Console tool allows checking how Googlebot treats a given URL, including any potential redirects. However, it only shows the last crawled URL, not the details of the complete chain.

For a thorough diagnosis, multiple sources must be combined: server logs to identify crawl patterns, an external crawler like Screaming Frog to detect chains, and HTTP header analysis to validate status codes. The Search Console tool remains a starting point, not a complete solution.

  • 301 permanent: complete transfer of PageRank, used for permanent URL changes
  • 302 temporary: does not always transfer PageRank, reserved for temporary situations
  • Redirect chains: dilute PageRank with each jump and slow down crawling
  • Redirect loops: completely block Googlebot and generate server errors
  • JavaScript redirects: invisible to Googlebot during the first crawl, requiring complete rendering

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Google remains deliberately vague about PageRank loss during redirects. Officially, a 301 transfers "the entirety" of link juice — but A/B testing frequently shows losses of 5 to 15% in organic traffic after even perfectly executed migrations. [To be verified] whether this loss comes from an algorithmic factor or undetected human errors.

The recommendation to use the inspection tool seems inadequate for sites with thousands of pages. This tool does not detect hidden redirect chains in the internal linking structure or server configuration issues that only appear under load.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

Geo-targeted redirects or user-agent based redirects pose a specific problem: they may send Googlebot to a differentiated version than what the user sees. Google tolerates these practices if they genuinely improve the experience, but penalizes aggressive cloaking.

E-commerce sites with millions of product variants sometimes use dynamic redirects based on available stock — redirecting a out-of-stock product to a similar category. Google has never clarified whether this practice dilutes PageRank or is deemed legitimate.

Beware of 302 redirects maintained for several months: Google eventually treats them as 301s, but with an unpredictable delay that can cost positions during the transition.

What nuances should be considered regarding PageRank transfer?

Contrary to official rhetoric, not all redirects have the same impact. A domain-to-domain 301 transfer is less effective than an internal URL-to-URL redirect on the same domain. Expired domains purchased for their link profile often undergo an invisible discount in the transfer.

Client-side JavaScript redirects only transmit PageRank after the complete rendering of the page by Googlebot. If your server takes 800ms to respond and the JavaScript takes 1.2 seconds to execute, you have already lost crawl budget compared to a standard server 301 redirect.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you prioritize checking on your existing redirects?

Start with an audit of redirect chains using Screaming Frog or an equivalent crawler. Any chain exceeding two hops should be corrected to point directly to the final destination.

Next, check the HTTP codes returned: a 302 that should be a 301, or worse, a 200 with a meta refresh, dilutes PageRank without valid reason. Analyze your server logs to identify URLs crawled by Googlebot that lead to redirects — that’s wasted budget.

How can you avoid classic mistakes during a site migration?

The worst mistake is to implement generic directory redirects instead of page-to-page. Redirecting all /old-blog/* to /blog/ loses semantic context and massively dilutes PageRank.

Map each URL with a precise semantic equivalent, even if it means thousands of lines in your .htaccess file or nginx configuration. Test all redirects in a staging environment before the switch, and keep a complete backup of the old URLs with their respective organic traffic.

What methodology should be used to monitor post-migration impact?

Set up daily position tracking on at least your top 100 keywords a week before migration. Compare performance week over week, rather than day by day — daily algorithmic noise masks true trends.

Monitor for 404 errors in Search Console that spike after migration: they indicate missing or misconfigured redirects. A spike in soft 404s indicates redirects leading to pages with no equivalent content — Google sees them as dead ends.

  • Crawl the entire site to identify all existing redirect chains
  • Convert all temporary 302s to permanent 301s if the change is definitive
  • Eliminate client-side JavaScript redirects in favor of server-side 301 redirects
  • Map each old URL to a semantically equivalent destination, never to the homepage
  • Test 100% of redirects in pre-production with an automated tool checking HTTP codes
  • Monitor daily for 404 and soft 404 errors in Search Console for 3 months post-migration
Redirects represent a critical issue for preserving your SEO capital during overhauls or migrations. A poorly executed redirect strategy can destroy years of SEO efforts in just a few days. If your site has a complex architecture with thousands of pages, support from a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and secure PageRank transfer. A thorough technical audit and a proven migration methodology often make the difference between a successful transition and a disaster in terms of organic traffic.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une redirection 301 transfère-t-elle vraiment 100% du PageRank ?
Google affirme que oui, mais les observations terrain montrent régulièrement des pertes de trafic de 5 à 15% même avec des migrations parfaitement exécutées. La prudence reste de mise.
Combien de temps faut-il maintenir une redirection 301 après une migration ?
Google recommande au minimum un an, mais pour sécuriser le transfert complet du PageRank et éviter les pertes de backlinks externes, maintenir les redirections indéfiniment reste la meilleure pratique.
Les redirections JavaScript sont-elles aussi efficaces que les 301 serveur ?
Non. Les redirections JavaScript nécessitent que Googlebot rende complètement la page, ce qui consomme plus de budget crawl et retarde le transfert de PageRank. Privilégiez toujours les redirections serveur.
Peut-on rediriger plusieurs anciennes URLs vers une seule page de destination ?
C'est techniquement possible mais déconseillé sauf cas exceptionnels. Google interprète ces redirections multiples comme une perte de contenu et dilue le PageRank transmis. Maintenez toujours une équivalence sémantique 1:1 quand c'est possible.
Comment gérer les redirections sur un site multilingue avec URLs différentes par langue ?
Redirigez chaque version linguistique vers son équivalent exact dans la nouvelle structure. Évitez de rediriger toutes les langues vers une langue par défaut, cela détruit le signal de pertinence géographique et linguistique accumulé.
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