Official statement
Other statements from this video 19 ▾
- 1:38 Pourquoi les outils SEO et Google Analytics ne montrent-ils pas les mêmes impacts après une Core Update ?
- 1:38 Pourquoi les classements post-Core Update évoluent-ils à des vitesses différentes selon vos outils ?
- 2:39 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter de ses backlinks et utiliser le fichier disavow ?
- 2:39 Faut-il vraiment surveiller tous ses backlinks ou Google exagère-t-il le risque ?
- 4:10 Le contenu généré par les utilisateurs pèse-t-il vraiment autant que votre contenu éditorial aux yeux de Google ?
- 4:11 Le contenu généré par les utilisateurs est-il vraiment traité comme le contenu éditorial par Google ?
- 6:51 Faut-il vraiment utiliser noindex pour gérer la visibilité du contenu interne ?
- 6:51 Faut-il utiliser le noindex pour tester un contenu avant de l'indexer ?
- 9:05 Faut-il vraiment isoler les contenus sensibles dans des sous-domaines séparés ?
- 10:31 Faut-il cloisonner les sections éditoriales d'un site pour booster sa visibilité dans Google ?
- 14:49 Le contenu white label nuit-il vraiment à votre indexation Google ?
- 22:02 Faut-il vraiment s'inscrire à Google News pour apparaître dans Discover ?
- 32:08 Comment Google News affiche-t-il les extraits de presse française sous la directive droit voisin ?
- 34:25 Comment optimiser pour Google Discover sans cibler de mots-clés ?
- 39:12 Google Discover privilégie-t-il vraiment la qualité sur le taux de clics ?
- 49:44 Faut-il vraiment utiliser le code 410 plutôt que le 404 pour accélérer la désindexation ?
- 53:59 404 ou 410 : Google fait-il vraiment la différence sur le long terme ?
- 54:00 Les balises canoniques locales peuvent-elles vraiment booster votre visibilité sans cannibalisation ?
- 57:38 Comment utiliser les balises canoniques pour éviter la cannibalisation entre vos contenus multi-localisations ?
Mueller states that Google does not have a dedicated algorithm for YMYL content (health, finance, etc.), but relies on quality rater guidelines. This means that E-E-A-T criteria are not applied through a specific algorithmic filter, but are integrated into the overall quality assessment. For SEO professionals, the challenge remains the same: proving expertise and credibility, regardless of the underlying mechanics.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by 'no specific algorithm'?
This statement from Mueller deserves a closer look. When Google claims to have no dedicated YMYL algorithm, it doesn't mean that this content escapes special treatment. The nuance is important.
The quality rater guidelines serve to train and refine the overall algorithms. These human raters evaluate thousands of pages based on specific criteria, including E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness). This data then feeds into machine learning. So no isolated YMYL filter — but increased focus on these topics in the overall algorithmic training.
Why does this technical distinction change anything?
Because a specific algorithm would be binary, identifiable, potentially circumventable. A diffuse evaluation system integrated into the overall relevance algorithm is much more complex to manipulate. Google thus dilutes responsibility: there is no 'YMYL button' that an engineer can adjust.
For an SEO practitioner, this means that E-E-A-T signals — backlinks from authoritative sites, mentions of qualified authors, presence of verifiable sources — are evaluated in the same stream as semantic relevance, content freshness, or user experience. Everything is correlated, nothing is isolated.
Are the Quality Rater Guidelines really applied algorithmically?
This is where Google’s discourse becomes murky. The QRG are officially a training tool, not a checklist applied by bots. But the data from raters serves to calibrate ranking models. So indirectly, yes, these criteria influence the algorithm.
Let's be honest: Google is not going to explain precisely how it transforms human ratings into algorithmic signals. What we know is that YMYL sites experience much harsher ranking fluctuations during Core Updates than lifestyle blogs. Coincidence? Unlikely.
- No dedicated YMYL algorithm, but a diffuse integration of E-E-A-T criteria into the overall quality evaluation.
- The Quality Rater Guidelines are used to train algorithms through machine learning, not to directly audit every page.
- YMYL content (health, finance, legal) experiences more volatile and severe ranking variations than other topics.
- The absence of a specific filter makes optimization more complex: impossible to target a single technical lever.
- The authority and credibility signals (backlinks, mentions from expert authors, citations from sources) remain crucial, regardless of the underlying mechanics.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. On paper, Mueller’s assertion stands: technically, Google probably doesn’t have a file like 'ymyl_filter.py' in its code. But in practice, YMYL sites are treated differently. Core Updates systematically hit these verticals harder. Health sites without identified authors lost 60 to 80% of their traffic during the Medic Update. No specific algorithm? Perhaps. But a distinct algorithmic treatment, clearly.
What Google doesn’t say is that the absence of a dedicated algorithm does not mean the absence of higher quality thresholds. The QRG impose much stricter standards for YMYL than for a recipe. These standards inevitably influence ranking models, even indirectly. [To be verified]: the exact correlation between QRG ratings and algorithmic adjustments remains opaque.
What nuances need to be added to this communication?
Mueller chooses his words carefully. 'No specific algorithm' can also be read as: 'No single lever that you could optimize in isolation'. This serves to discourage purely technical approaches on these issues. Google wants YMYL sites to invest in real credibility, not in SEO tricks.
But let's be clear: saying there’s no YMYL algorithm is also a communication strategy. It spares Google from having to justify why a particular medical site dropped by 70% during an update. 'Sorry, our overall algorithms determined that your quality was insufficient' — this is harder to contest than 'your site was penalized by the YMYL filter.'
When does this rule not really apply?
If you're in a YMYL niche — say, crypto investment advice or online medical diagnostics — and your site shows no identifiable author, no verifiable sources, and no backlinks from authoritative sites, you’re going to struggle. Specific algorithm or not.
And this is where Google’s discourse becomes irritating. Claiming there’s no special YMYL treatment when these sites are the first to take a hit during Core Updates is at best semantic bad faith. What you need to remember is: the impact on your ranking is the same, whether Google calls it a dedicated algorithm or an 'enhanced overall qualitative assessment'. Focus on E-E-A-T signals; the rest is just cosmetic.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely for YMYL sites?
The first step: identify and display your authors. Every health, finance, or legal article must clearly state who wrote it, along with their qualifications. A doctor for medical content, a licensed financial advisor for finance. Google wants to see proof of expertise, not pseudonyms or anonymous writers.
Next, integrate verifiable external sources. Citations from medical studies (PubMed, Cochrane), references to official institutions (WHO, FDA, AMF), links to academic publications. These signals enhance credibility and prove that your content relies on reliable data, not unsupported opinions.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never publish YMYL content generated by AI without expert validation. Tools like ChatGPT can produce coherent text, but factually risky in health or finance. A medical error in an article can be costly — legally and in ranking. Have it reviewed by a qualified professional.
Another trap: neglected 'About' pages and legal mentions. Google wants to know who is behind the site. A vague 'About' page, without an address or mentions of the editorial team, is a negative signal. Maximum transparency: names, photos, LinkedIn of the authors, real contact information.
How can I check if my site meets Google’s expectations?
Download the Quality Rater Guidelines (public document of 170 pages) and audit your YMYL pages using this framework. Rate each page based on E-E-A-T criteria. If you fall below 'Needs Met' or 'Low Quality', you have work to do. It’s tedious, but it’s exactly what Google’s human raters do.
Also analyze your backlinks. A YMYL site with 80% of links coming from link farms or sites without authority will be penalized. Prioritize backlinks from institutional, academic, or recognized media sites in your field. Quality over quantity, always.
- Clearly display the authors with their qualifications on each YMYL page
- Integrate credible external sources (studies, official institutions, academic publications)
- Create a detailed 'About' page with real contact information and visible editorial team
- Have all YMYL content reviewed by a qualified expert before publication
- Audit backlinks and disavow toxic links from sites without authority
- Download the QRG and evaluate your pages according to the official E-E-A-T framework
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google pénalise-t-il automatiquement les sites YMYL sans auteurs identifiés ?
Les Quality Rater Guidelines sont-elles appliquées directement par l'algorithme ?
Un site YMYL peut-il ranker sans backlinks de sites d'autorité ?
Le contenu généré par IA est-il interdit sur les sites YMYL ?
Les sites YMYL doivent-ils obligatoirement mentionner des sources externes ?
🎥 From the same video 19
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 16/10/2019
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.