Official statement
Other statements from this video 15 ▾
- 0:38 Désactiver temporairement son panier e-commerce pénalise-t-il vraiment le référencement ?
- 4:51 Les rapports Search Console reflètent-ils vraiment l'état de votre indexation ?
- 4:51 La taille d'échantillon Search Console varie-t-elle selon la qualité perçue de votre site ?
- 4:51 Pourquoi les agrégateurs de liens ont-ils tant de mal à ranker ?
- 9:29 Googlebot ignore-t-il vraiment les banners de consentement cookies lors de l'indexation ?
- 12:12 Faut-il encore utiliser le Disavow Tool pour gérer les liens spam ?
- 20:56 Comment Google actualise-t-il vraiment le cache AMP de vos pages ?
- 20:56 Pourquoi Google affiche-t-il parfois les versions HTML et AMP d'une même page simultanément dans les SERP ?
- 23:41 Comment organiser les sitemaps quand on gère des milliers de sous-domaines ?
- 23:41 Pourquoi vos milliers de sous-domaines ralentissent-ils le crawl de Google ?
- 23:41 Comment gérer efficacement des milliers de sous-domaines dans Search Console ?
- 27:54 Search Console compte-t-elle vraiment tous les clics que vous croyez ?
- 30:58 Le contenu masqué en CSS est-il vraiment indexé en mobile-first ?
- 34:12 Pourquoi votre site SEO oscille-t-il entre bon et pénalisé sans raison apparente ?
- 37:52 Quelle structure d'URL choisir pour maximiser votre ranking international ?
Completely blocking a site (displaying a 'closed' message on all pages) triggers fast and significant deindexing. Keeping the site active with only the cart deactivated preserves indexing and facilitates the recovery of organic traffic upon reopening. The choice between these two approaches directly determines an e-commerce site's SEO survival in the face of a business interruption.
What you need to understand
Why does Google completely deindex a fully blocked site?
When a site displays only a closure message on all its pages — without content, navigation, or any functional elements — Googlebot interprets this signal as a definitive disappearance of content. The indexing robot observes that each URL now returns identical content that lacks substance.
The logic is simple: a site that no longer offers any informational or transactional value has no reason to be included in the index. Google makes no distinction between a temporary closure and a permanent disappearance unless you provide contrary signals. The deindexing process accelerates even more if your pages are crawled frequently.
What changes when the site remains active with a deactivated cart?
Maintaining product sheets, categories, editorial content, and navigation intact allows Googlebot to continue crawling a functional site. Only the transactional function (adding to cart, payment) is deactivated — but the content remains indexable and relevant.
This approach sends a radically different signal: the site still exists, offers quality content, but suspends sales temporarily. Google thus maintains the indexing of pages, preserves acquired positions, and organic traffic can continue to arrive (even if conversion is impossible). Upon reopening, simply reactivating the cart is enough — no SEO rebuilding is necessary.
What are the real risks of rapid deindexing?
The loss of indexing results in an immediate disappearance of organic traffic. But the real problem arises at reopening: regaining your positions takes time, sometimes several weeks or months depending on the competitiveness of the sector.
In the meantime, your competitors occupy the field. You lose the trust accumulated with Google (crawl history, user signals, topical authority) and must rebuild everything. It’s like demolishing a house to rebuild it in the same spot — when all you needed to do was temporarily close the front door.
- Completely blocking a site causes rapid deindexing and complicates the recovery of traffic.
- Only deactivating the cart preserves indexing, positions, and facilitates the resumption of activities.
- Google does not automatically distinguish between temporary closure and permanent disappearance without concrete signals.
- SEO rebuilding post-deindexing can take several weeks to months depending on the sector.
- Keeping content active helps maintain trust signals and accumulated history.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. We have seen dozens of e-commerce sites undergo exactly this scenario during lockdowns. A site displaying 'closed due to COVID' on all its pages disappears from the index in 2-3 weeks at most — sometimes in just a few days if crawling is frequent. Recovery then takes 2 to 6 months depending on domain authority.
In contrast, sites that kept their product sheets visible with a simple 'delivery suspended' or 'cart temporarily unavailable' message retained 90-100% of their indexing and regained their traffic within 48-72 hours after reactivation. No surprise, no ambiguity: Mueller confirms what we’ve been observing for years.
What nuances should be added to this rule?
It all depends on the HTTP status returned and the duration of closure. If you block the site with a 503 code (service temporarily unavailable) accompanied by a Retry-After header, Google understands this as a short interruption and can maintain indexing for a few days. But beyond a week, even with a 503, deindexing begins.
If the closure exceeds 30 days and you absolutely cannot keep the site active, the 503 with Retry-After is preferable to a complete block. But honestly? Keeping the content visible with a deactivated cart remains the safest strategy in 99% of cases. [To be verified]: Google does not publish any official timeline before deindexing on a prolonged 503 — field observations show a tolerance of a maximum of 7 to 14 days.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
If your site sells perishable goods or is subject to strict legal constraints, keeping product sheets visible while sales are impossible can cause issues (misleading information, regulatory non-compliance). In this case, add an explicit banner at the top of each page clearly indicating the temporary suspension.
Another edge case: a site with a 100% transactional business model, without informational value. If your product sheets only contain technical specs copied from the manufacturer, keeping the site active does not provide any real value to users. Google could then consider these pages as low-quality content — but even in this scenario, it is still preferable to a complete block.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done practically in the event of a temporary closure?
Keep your site fully accessible: navigation, product sheets, editorial content, FAQ, everything must remain viewable. Add a visible banner (at the top of the page, in the header) explaining the situation: 'Deliveries suspended until [date]' or 'Cart temporarily unavailable'.
Only deactivate the add-to-cart function and the payment tunnel. Do not touch share buttons, customer reviews, or search filters — everything that keeps the site alive should remain operational. If possible, offer newsletter sign-up to inform visitors about the reopening.
What errors should be absolutely avoided?
Never replace your entire site with a single maintenance page. This is the fatal mistake that triggers rapid deindexing. Do not redirect all your URLs to the homepage with a 302 redirect — the same logic, the same catastrophe.
Also avoid hiding prices or emptying product descriptions. Google needs to see that the content still exists to maintain indexing. A strikethrough price with the note 'temporarily unavailable' is infinitely preferable to a page with no price at all.
How can I check that my site remains correctly indexed during the closure?
Monitor the Search Console, Coverage section daily. If you see a sharp drop in indexed pages, react immediately — you may have inadvertently blocked something. Also check that Googlebot continues to crawl your main pages (Crawl Stats section).
Run site:yourdomain.com searches regularly to visually confirm that your pages remain present. Keep an eye on your key positions via a tracking tool: if they drop massively while you haven’t changed anything other than deactivating the cart, it’s a sign that Google misinterprets your temporary closure.
- Keep the entire site accessible (navigation, product sheets, content).
- Deactivate only the add-to-cart and payment functions, not the content.
- Add an explicit banner at the top of each page explaining the temporary suspension.
- Monitor the Search Console daily (indexed pages, crawl) throughout the closure.
- Offer newsletter sign-up to inform visitors of the reopening.
- Never redirect all URLs to a single maintenance page.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps Google met-il à désindexer un site complètement bloqué ?
Peut-on utiliser un code HTTP 503 pour signaler une fermeture temporaire ?
Faut-il masquer les prix si le panier est désactivé ?
Comment réactiver le trafic après une désindexation complète ?
Un bandeau de maintenance en JavaScript suffit-il à préserver l'indexation ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 48 min · published on 26/06/2020
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