Official statement
Other statements from this video 20 ▾
- □ Pourquoi Google ne peut-il jamais garantir que vos utilisateurs atterriront sur la bonne version linguistique de votre site ?
- □ Faut-il bannir les redirections automatiques pour les sites multilingues ?
- □ Faut-il bloquer l'exécution JavaScript pour les SPA avec SSR ?
- □ Faut-il baliser les mots étrangers avec l'attribut lang pour le SEO ?
- □ Le contenu dupliqué entraîne-t-il vraiment une pénalité Google ?
- □ Le rel=canonical est-il vraiment pris en compte par Google ou juste une suggestion ignorée ?
- □ Les FAQ dans les articles de blog sont-elles vraiment utiles pour le SEO ?
- □ Hreflang est-il vraiment obligatoire pour gérer un site international ?
- □ Les résultats de recherche localisés : comment Google adapte-t-il vraiment son algorithme selon les pays et les langues ?
- □ Le noindex est-il vraiment inutile pour gérer le budget de crawl ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment se limiter à une seule thématique sur son site pour bien ranker ?
- □ Combien de liens peut-on vraiment mettre sur une page sans pénalité Google ?
- □ L'URL référente dans Search Console impacte-t-elle vraiment votre classement ?
- □ Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment inutile pour le référencement ?
- □ Faut-il s'inquiéter de réutiliser les mêmes blocs de texte sur plusieurs pages ?
- □ Google valide-t-il vraiment la traduction automatique sur les sites multilingues ?
- □ Les URLs bloquées par robots.txt mais indexées posent-elles vraiment problème ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment dupliquer le schema Organisation sur toutes les pages du site ?
- □ Les avis auto-hébergés peuvent-ils afficher des étoiles dans les résultats de recherche Google ?
- □ Pourquoi les fusions de sites Web génèrent-elles des résultats imprévisibles aux yeux de Google ?
Google's web cache is only a convenience feature for accessing temporarily unavailable pages. The absence of your content from the cache does not penalize your SEO. It's a user-facing feature, not a ranking signal.
What you need to understand
What is Google's cache actually used for?
Web cache stores snapshots of pages crawled by Googlebot. Users can access it when the original site is down or the page has been removed.
It's a convenience. A service provided to internet users — nothing more. Google doesn't use it to evaluate the quality of your site or to determine your ranking position.
Why don't some pages appear in the cache?
Several technical reasons: the noarchive directive in meta tags or HTTP headers, dynamically generated content that changes too frequently, or simply a recently crawled page whose snapshot hasn't been updated yet.
The absence of cache can also signal an indexation problem — but this isn't always the case. A page can be indexed without a visible snapshot.
Should you worry if your pages aren't cached?
No. If your pages are indexed and ranking, the absence of cache is inconsequential. Instead, verify your presence in the index through Search Console or a site: query.
- Cache is a user-facing feature, not an SEO indicator
- The absence of a snapshot doesn't impact crawl, indexation, or ranking
- A noarchive directive intentionally prevents cache display
- Focus on actual indexation, not cache visibility
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes — and it's even a welcome clarification. Too many practitioners still confuse cache with indexation. A page can be indexed without an accessible snapshot, and vice versa.
We regularly see perfectly performing sites where certain pages show no cache. No measurable impact on rankings. The real indicator is presence in the index and SERP performance.
Why does this confusion persist?
Because for a long time, checking the cache was a quick diagnostic reflex. No visible cache? You'd wonder if Googlebot had visited recently.
But tools have evolved. Search Console provides far more reliable data on crawl and indexation. Clinging to cache as an SEO metric is like looking in the rearview mirror.
When is cache still useful?
For competitive analysis or to verify what Googlebot actually saw during its last visit — especially with heavy JavaScript content. But this is a one-off diagnostic use, not a KPI to track.
And let's be honest: Google is gradually deprecating this feature. The interface changes, access becomes more complicated. Don't build any SEO strategy around cache. [To verify]: Google might even remove public access to this feature eventually.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you monitor instead of cache?
Focus on indexation metrics in Search Console: pages crawled, pages indexed, coverage errors. These are your true health indicators.
Use crawl stats reports to detect anomalies: sudden drop in pages crawled, increase in errors, degraded response time. Cache won't tell you any of this.
How do you verify that Googlebot can properly access your pages?
Use the URL Inspection tool in Search Console. You see exactly the rendered HTML, blocked resources, any potential JavaScript issues.
Also test with the Mobile-Friendly Test and Rich Results Test. These tools show you what Google actually extracts — far more reliable than a random cache snapshot.
What mistakes should you avoid?
Don't panic if your pages don't appear in cache. First check if they're indexed and performing well. If so, there's no problem whatsoever.
Don't block cache reflexively with noarchive — unless you have a real reason (sensitive content, personal data). This directive neither improves nor damages your SEO.
- Monitor indexation via Search Console, not cache
- Use the URL Inspection tool to diagnose rendering issues
- Regularly check coverage reports and 4xx/5xx errors
- Test JavaScript rendering with official Google tools
- Don't confuse cache absence with indexation problems
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Si ma page n'est pas en cache, est-elle quand même indexée ?
La directive noarchive empêche-t-elle l'indexation ?
Le cache Google influence-t-il la vitesse d'indexation ?
Peut-on forcer Google à mettre à jour le cache d'une page ?
Pourquoi certaines pages anciennes restent-elles en cache alors qu'elles ont été supprimées ?
🎥 From the same video 20
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 21/10/2022
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