Official statement
Other statements from this video 42 ▾
- 42:49 Can hreflang really be used across multiple distinct domains?
- 48:45 Can hreflang really be used across multiple distinct domains?
- 58:47 Should you really avoid duplicating your content across two distinct sites?
- 58:47 Should you really avoid creating multiple sites for the same content?
- 91:16 Is it really necessary to index the internal search pages on your site?
- 91:16 Should you block internal search pages to prevent indexing of infinite space?
- 125:44 Do Core Web Vitals Really Influence Google's Crawl Budget?
- 125:44 Can reducing page size really enhance your crawl budget?
- 152:31 Does the internal links report in Search Console truly reflect the state of your link structure?
- 152:31 Why does the Search Console's internal links report show only a sample?
- 172:13 Should you really be concerned about redirect chains for Google's crawl?
- 172:13 How many redirects does Google really follow before it splits the crawl?
- 201:37 How does Google actually segment your Core Web Vitals by groups of pages?
- 201:37 How does Google actually segment your Core Web Vitals by page groups?
- 248:11 Is it true that AMP or canonical really captures the SEO signals?
- 257:21 Does the Chrome UX Report really count your cached AMP pages?
- 272:10 Is it necessary to redirect your AMP URLs during a change?
- 272:10 Should you really redirect your old AMP URLs to the new ones?
- 294:42 Is AMP really neutral for Google rankings, or does it hide an invisible visibility lever?
- 296:42 Is AMP really a Google ranking factor or just a ticket to access certain features?
- 342:21 Why does copied content sometimes outrank the original despite the DMCA?
- 342:21 Is the DMCA really effective in protecting your duplicated content on Google?
- 359:44 Why does copied content outrank your original material on Google?
- 409:35 Why do your featured snippets disappear seemingly without a technical reason?
- 409:35 Do featured snippets and rich results really fluctuate randomly?
- 455:08 Is it true that mobile hidden content is really indexed by Google?
- 455:08 Is it true that Google really indexes hidden content in responsive CSS?
- 563:51 Can structured data really force the display of a knowledge panel?
- 563:51 Is there any structured markup that guarantees the appearance of a Knowledge Panel?
- 583:50 Can you really force sitelinks to appear in Google?
- 649:39 Do 301 redirects really transfer 100% of SEO juice without any loss?
- 649:39 Do 301 redirects really transfer 100% of PageRank and SEO signals?
- 722:53 Should you really delete or redirect expired content instead of keeping it indexable?
- 722:53 Should you really remove expired pages or can you leave them labeled 'expired'?
- 859:32 Are keywords in the URL a ranking factor or just a temporary crutch?
- 859:32 Do words in the URL really influence Google rankings?
- 908:40 Should you really add structured data to embedded YouTube videos?
- 909:01 Should you really add video structured data when you're already embedding YouTube?
- 932:46 Does Page Experience really only matter for mobile SEO?
- 932:46 Why is Google ignoring desktop Core Web Vitals in its ranking algorithm?
- 952:49 Do the API and Search Console interface really display the same data?
- 963:49 Can you use different templates for each language version without harming international SEO?
Google automatically generates sitelinks by analyzing a site's internal navigation — no manual submission is possible. Improving the navigation structure increases the chances of display, but there is no guarantee of results. The majority of sites will never have sitelinks, even with optimized architecture.
What you need to understand
What really determines the display of sitelinks?
Sitelinks appear under certain search results to facilitate access to main pages of a site. Google generates them entirely automatically — no settings in Search Console can force them.
The system mainly relies on the internal navigation of the site: main menus, hierarchy, footer links. The algorithm identifies the pages that the site presents itself as important in its structure. If your main menu lists 5 major categories, Google understands that these are priority sections.
Why does Mueller emphasize the lack of guarantee?
Even with a clear and structured navigation, display remains an algorithmic decision. Google evaluates whether the sitelinks provide real value to the user for that specific query. A site may have sitelinks for its brand, but never for generic queries.
The phrase "most sites do not have sitelinks" sets expectations: it is not an indicator of SEO quality. Many high-traffic sites never display them. It's a UX bonus, not an objective in itself.
How does Google interpret internal navigation?
The algorithm analyzes the consistency between HTML structure and internal linking. A consistent navigation menu across all pages, internal links pointing to major sections, a clear hierarchy in URLs — all help Google understand the architecture.
Sitelinks also reflect user behavior: if users heavily click on certain sections from the homepage, it reinforces their importance in Google's eyes. Technical structure alone is not enough — real usage must validate this hierarchy.
- Automatic generation: no manual submission, no settings in GSC
- Internal navigation as the main source: menus, footer, linking
- No guarantee even with perfect optimization
- Contextual display: varies based on query and user intent
- Majority of sites excluded: having sitelinks remains the exception, not the norm
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. Sites that regularly display sitelinks share common characteristics: stable main navigation, clear structure, strong brand authority. But there are also cases where technically impeccable sites never have them — consistent with the lack of guarantee mentioned by Mueller.
The point about "most sites do not have sitelinks" deserves emphasis: it's factual. Many beginner SEOs believe that the absence of sitelinks indicates a technical problem. No — it's just that Google reserves this display for situations where it deems the user contribution sufficient.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller says "mainly" internal navigation, not "exclusively". Other signals come into play: domain authority, brand search volume, click-through rate on certain pages. A site with a strong brand is more likely to obtain sitelinks, even if its navigation is not perfect.
Another nuance: sitelinks can change according to the query. Searching for "brand-name" versus "brand-name service" may display different sitelinks. The algorithm adapts the selection to the presumed intent. [To be verified]: the exact proportion of sites displaying sitelinks varies by industry — e-commerce and media seem favored, likely due to a naturally clear structure.
When does this rule not apply?
Single-page sites or isolated landing pages will never have sitelinks — logically, there is no exploitable internal navigation. Sites with pure JavaScript navigation may suffer if Google struggles to interpret the structure, despite progress in JS rendering.
Some sites display
Practical impact and recommendations
Que faut-il optimiser concrètement pour maximiser ses chances ?
Commence par auditer ta navigation principale : est-elle identique sur toutes les pages ? Accessible en HTML pur ? Les libellés de liens sont-ils explicites ? Un menu qui change selon les sections ou qui repose sur du JavaScript complexe complique l'analyse par Google.
Vérifie la cohérence entre URLs et hiérarchie. Si ton site présente "Produits" comme section majeure dans le menu, mais que l'URL est "/catalogue-complet-produits-entreprise", il y a friction. Les ancres de liens internes doivent correspondre aux titres de pages — cela renforce la compréhension sémantique.
Quelles erreurs bloquent l'affichage des sitelinks ?
L'absence de menu fixe est fréquente : certains sites n'ont pas de navigation cohérente, juste des liens contextuels dans le contenu. Google ne peut pas déduire une structure claire. Autre erreur : trop de liens dans le menu principal. Un menu avec 15 entrées de même niveau empêche l'algorithme d'identifier les priorités.
Les redirections en chaîne sur les pages importantes nuisent aussi. Si ton lien menu pointe vers une URL qui redirige vers une autre, Google peut ignorer cette section comme instable. Enfin, bloquer des sections entières en robots.txt ou noindex tue évidemment toute chance pour ces pages d'apparaître en sitelinks.
Comment vérifier que mon site est bien configuré ?
Utilise l'inspection d'URL dans Search Console pour visualiser comment Google rend ta navigation. Compare le HTML source et le HTML rendu — s'il y a des différences majeures sur le menu, tu as un problème de rendu JavaScript. Teste aussi la navigation en désactivant JS dans le navigateur : si le menu disparaît, Google galère probablement.
Analyse les données de clic internes dans Google Analytics : quelles pages reçoivent le plus de clics depuis la homepage ? Si certaines pages critiques ont peu de clics, c'est un signal que ta navigation ne les met pas assez en avant. Google observe ces comportements.
- Menu de navigation identique et accessible sur toutes les pages (HTML pur)
- Maximum 7-8 entrées principales dans le menu pour hiérarchiser clairement
- Ancres de liens descriptives et cohérentes avec les titres de pages cibles
- URLs des pages principales sans redirections ni chaînes complexes
- Vérifier le rendu côté Google dans Search Console (HTML rendu vs source)
- Analyser les clics internes pour identifier les pages sous-valorisées dans la navigation
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on demander manuellement l'ajout de sitelinks via Search Console ?
Les sitelinks affichés sont-ils toujours les mêmes pour toutes les requêtes liées au site ?
Un site sans sitelinks a-t-il un problème SEO ?
Est-ce que corriger la navigation garantit l'apparition de sitelinks ?
Les sitelinks améliorent-ils le classement général du site ?
🎥 From the same video 42
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 996h50 · published on 12/03/2021
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