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Official statement

Google does not rely on the concept of Domain Authority. It can be a useful tool for SEOs but should be taken with caution.
10:30
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h16 💬 EN 📅 03/11/2017 ✂ 14 statements
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📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims it does not use Domain Authority (DA) as a direct ranking signal. This metric, created by third-party tools like Moz and Ahrefs, remains useful for evaluating a site's strength but does not reflect how the algorithm actually functions. SEOs must understand the nuance: Google measures other signals (PageRank, link quality, topical authority) that indirectly influence what these tools calculate.

What you need to understand

What is the difference between Domain Authority and Google's signals?

Domain Authority (DA) is a proprietary metric calculated by third-party SEO tools. Moz popularized this concept with a score out of 100, intended to predict a site's ability to rank. Ahrefs offers its Domain Rating (DR), and Semrush provides its Authority Score.

Google does not use any of these metrics. The search engine calculates its own signals: PageRank (still active internally despite the removal of the public toolbar), the quality and topical relevance of backlinks, content freshness, and user engagement. These signals are far more granular and contextual than a single score at the domain level.

The confusion arises because third-party tools attempt to model Google's signals by crawling the web and analyzing link profiles. Their DA/DR often correlates with actual performance, which maintains the illusion that it is an official ranking factor.

Why does Google emphasize this point?

John Mueller regularly reiterates that Domain Authority does not exist in the algorithm. This insistence aims to realign practices in an industry obsessed with simplified metrics. Many clients and even some junior SEOs take DA at face value, rejecting link opportunities because a site has a DA of 25 instead of 40.

Google wants practitioners to focus on actual qualitative signals: the topical relevance of a link, the organic traffic from the source site, editorial quality, and reader engagement. A backlink from a niche blog with a DA of 30 but a highly targeted audience can be worth ten times more than a generic link from a DA 60 site that's off-topic.

Do third-party tools measure anything useful anyway?

Yes, and that's where the nuance lies. DA/DR remains a practical correlation indicator for quickly comparing sites, prioritizing link-building prospects, or auditing a link profile. These tools crawl billions of pages and analyze link graphs, providing an approximation of a domain's strength.

The problem arises when these scores are treated as absolute targets. Optimizing to raise your DA does not guarantee any traffic gain or ranking improvement. Google measures hundreds of signals at the page and query level, not a global domain score. A site can have a low DR and dominate a niche thanks to strong topical authority, expert content, and highly relevant links.

  • Google does not calculate an overall Domain Authority like Moz or Ahrefs
  • The engine uses internal PageRank, link quality, topical authority, and hundreds of other contextual signals
  • DA/DR are third-party predictive models that correlate with performance but do not directly cause anything
  • Using these metrics for comparison or prioritization remains valid, as long as you do not fetishize them
  • A relevant link from a DA 20 site can be worth much more than an off-topic link from a DA 70 site

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement contradict observed practices in the field?

Not really. Experienced SEOs have known for a long time that Google does not read Moz. The misunderstanding mainly arises from agencies or clients who tout DA as proof of quality. In reality, when we audit sites that rank well, we find they often have a coherent link profile, relevant anchors, expert content, and a real audience, not just a high score on a third-party tool.

What works in 2025: Build a documented topical authority (E-E-A-T), obtain links from sites discussing the same subject, and publish content that generates engagement signals. A site specializing in tax law with a DR of 35 can outperform a generalist site with a DR of 65 on its target queries due to its relevance and recognized expertise.

What are the limits of Google's assertion?

Mueller is technically correct, but it remains incomplete. Google does measure something that resembles domain authority, even if it doesn't call it that. Historical PageRank worked at both the domain and page levels. Recent patents mention concepts like "site quality score" and domain-level topical authority.

The real question: Does Google aggregate signals at the domain level to influence crawl budget, indexing frequency, or quality thresholds? [To be verified] but field observations suggest that it does. A site with a strong history, many authoritative links, and stable traffic often receives a more generous crawl and gets indexed faster. This is not "DA" in the Moz sense, but a form of internally calculated authority.

How to interpret this statement without naivety?

Take Mueller at his word: Google does not use the DA metric as published by Moz. This does not mean that the overall strength of a domain never counts. The engine calculates its own proprietary signals that, when aggregated, produce effects similar to what third-party tools model.

A site with thousands of quality backlinks, a ten-year history, a loyal audience, and regularly updated content will benefit from cumulative signals that facilitate its indexing and ranking. Call it "trust," "authority," "distributed PageRank," or "site quality score," no matter the name: the effect exists. Google's statement aims to prevent SEOs from optimizing for a third-party score rather than for the true quality levers.

Note: do not throw away your SEO tools. DA/DR remains useful shortcuts to quickly qualify a link prospect or compare competitors. But never treat them as absolute KPIs or official ranking factors. Always validate with real metrics: estimated organic traffic, positions on target queries, editorial quality, engagement.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely after this statement?

Stop using DA as an exclusive criterion in your link-building strategies. When prospecting partners or evaluating a backlink, look at topical relevance, the site's organic traffic (via Semrush or Ahrefs), the editorial quality of the content, and engagement through comments or social shares. A niche blog with 5,000 targeted monthly visitors is better than a general directory with a DA of 50 and no real traffic.

Focus your efforts on building a measurable topical authority. Publish expert content that demonstrates your E-E-A-T, obtain mentions and links from sites in the same field, and participate in podcasts or webinars in your industry. Google recognizes these signals of relevance and expertise far better than a global domain score.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Do not reject a relevant contextual link simply because the site displays a DA below an arbitrary threshold. Many emerging sites or specialized blogs have low third-party metrics but a qualified and engaged audience. A dofollow link in a thorough article read by 2,000 professionals in your niche can generate direct traffic and strengthen your topical authority.

Do not pay extra for "DA 70+ backlinks" sold by questionable platforms. These sites often artificially inflate their metrics with link networks, spam, or low-quality content. Google detects these profiles and devalues or ignores these links, even if the third-party tool shows a flattering score.

How to ensure your strategy aligns with Google’s true signals?

Audit your backlinks by crossing multiple dimensions: topical relevance (does the site discuss the same topic?), estimated organic traffic (via Ahrefs or Semrush), editorial quality (length of articles, publication frequency, identified authors), engagement signals (comments, shares, time spent). A link from a site that checks these boxes will have a real impact on your positions, regardless of its DA.

Monitor your positions on strategic queries, your organic traffic, and your click-through rate in Search Console. These metrics reflect the cumulative effect of all the signals Google truly measures. If your DA rises but your traffic stagnates, you are optimizing for the wrong objective.

  • Qualify each link prospect with topical relevance, estimated traffic, and editorial quality, not just DA/DR
  • Build an E-E-A-T content strategy to strengthen your documented topical authority
  • Obtain contextual backlinks from sites in your niche, even if their DA is modest
  • Reject offers for "guaranteed DA 80 backlinks" without relevance and quality audits
  • Track your real KPIs (positions, organic traffic, conversions) rather than third-party scores
  • Use DA/DR as rapid comparison indicators, but never as optimization targets
Domain authority remains a useful diagnostic and prioritization tool, provided you never confuse it with an official ranking factor. Google measures hundreds of contextual signals, mainly at the page and query levels. Focus your efforts on topical relevance, documented expertise, and the real quality of links. These optimizations require a detailed analysis and a tailored strategy: if you lack the time or internal expertise to audit your backlinks, qualify your prospects, and build strong topical authority, it may be wise to seek assistance from a specialized SEO agency that has the technical and strategic knowledge to master these dimensions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google utilise-t-il le PageRank comme équivalent de l'autorité de domaine ?
Google utilise toujours le PageRank en interne mais à l'échelle de la page, pas du domaine global. Il calcule aussi des signaux de qualité et d'autorité thématique qui peuvent influencer le crawl et l'indexation, mais ce ne sont pas les métriques DA/DR des outils tiers.
Dois-je arrêter d'utiliser Moz, Ahrefs ou Semrush ?
Non. Ces outils restent précieux pour comparer des sites, qualifier des prospects de liens et analyser la concurrence. Utilisez leurs métriques comme indicateurs de corrélation, jamais comme objectifs d'optimisation directs.
Un site avec faible DA peut-il bien ranker ?
Absolument. Un site spécialisé avec du contenu expert, des liens pertinents et une audience engagée peut dominer sa niche même avec un DA modeste. Google mesure la pertinence et la qualité, pas les scores tiers.
Comment savoir si un backlink est vraiment de qualité ?
Vérifiez la pertinence thématique, le trafic organique estimé du site source, la qualité éditoriale des contenus, l'engagement des lecteurs et l'ancrage contextuel. Un lien pertinent depuis un site DR 30 peut valoir plus qu'un lien hors sujet depuis un DR 70.
Quelle métrique suivre à la place de la DA ?
Suivez vos positions sur requêtes stratégiques, votre trafic organique dans la Search Console, vos conversions et votre taux de clics. Ce sont les seuls indicateurs qui reflètent l'effet réel de vos optimisations sur les algorithmes Google.
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