Official statement
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Google recommends the rel=nofollow attribute for links stemming from arrangements, advertising, or comments of uncertain quality. This directive aims to avoid passing PageRank to non-editorialized sites. Practically, this means auditing your outbound links and qualifying each type of link based on its origin — but beware, nofollow is no longer a strict directive since the introduction of rel=sponsored and rel=ugc.
What you need to understand
Why is Google insisting on caution with certain outbound links?
Mueller's statement targets three specific categories: links from arrangements (partnerships, exchanges), advertising links, and comment links. The common denominator? You haven't necessarily verified the quality of the destination site.
Google aims to protect the integrity of its link graph. An unrestricted link transfers PageRank — it's a vote of confidence. If you vote for anyone without scrutiny, you dilute your own authority and risk being associated with questionable practices.
What does a link “of uncertain quality” really mean?
This is the gray area. A comment left by an unknown user? Uncertain. A sponsored link to a site you have never audited? Uncertain. A partnership with a site that engages in scraping or spamming? Clearly problematic.
The idea: if you can't ensure that the destination site adheres to the Quality Rater Guidelines, protect yourself. Nofollow acts as a cautionary filter — you create the link, but you do not endorse its destination in Google's eyes.
Is nofollow still the only option in 2025?
No. Google has introduced rel=sponsored for advertising links and rel=ugc (User Generated Content) for user-generated content. These attributes offer more nuanced semantics and effectively replace the generic nofollow.
Nofollow has been a hint attribute since 2019 — Google can choose to ignore it in certain contexts. Using sponsored or ugc is therefore more accurate and aligned with current recommendations.
- rel=nofollow: generic non-endorsement attribute, now a hint
- rel=sponsored: required for paid links, paid partnerships, advertisements
- rel=ugc: recommended for comments, forums, user contributions
- Possible combination: rel="ugc nofollow" to strengthen the signal if the content is truly questionable
- Regular audit: ensure that non-editorial outbound links are adequately qualified
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Yes and no. On well-maintained sites with strict comment moderation, ugc links are rarely an issue. On open platforms or sites with thousands of unfiltered comments, it's another story.
I have seen sites penalized for spammy outbound links because they let hundreds of comments with links to content farms linger. Nofollow or ugc is not always enough — if Google deems that you facilitate large-scale spam, you remain exposed. [To verify]: Google claims that link attributes are hints, but the real tolerance for massive spam remains unclear.
Does nofollow truly protect against a manual penalty?
No absolute guarantee. Manual actions for "artificial outbound links" do exist in Search Console. If a human reviewer determines that your site is serving as a conduit for a link scheme, the nofollow attribute may mitigate but not immunize.
The real risk? Secret arrangements — undisclosed partnerships, cross-link exchanges without nofollow, paid guest posts without sponsored. Google has become very good at detecting these patterns through link graph analysis and behavioral signals.
When can we skip nofollow or its variants?
When you are truly editorializing the link. If you recommend a tool, an article, a resource that you have personally vetted and that this recommendation adds value to your audience — no nofollow needed.
The issue is the porous boundary. A partnership can be legitimate and provide value, but if there is financial compensation or in-kind benefits, Google requires sponsored. A comment may be relevant, but if you don’t have the time to moderate finely, it’s better to systematically apply ugc.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you audit your outbound links to identify those that require a cautionary attribute?
First step: export all your outbound links via Screaming Frog or an equivalent crawler. Filter by page type (articles, comments, footers, sidebars). Identify patterns: footer links are often partnerships, comment links are often UGC, links in sponsored articles.
Second step: check for the presence of attributes. Any link stemming from a commercial arrangement without rel=sponsored is a red flag. Any comment without rel=ugc or nofollow is a potential flaw. Prioritize high-traffic pages — these are the ones Google crawls the most.
What technical mistakes should absolutely be avoided with these attributes?
Do not mix syntaxes. rel="nofollow sponsored" is valid, but rel="nofollow, sponsored" (with a comma) may be misinterpreted by some parsers. Use spaces, no commas.
Avoid nofollow by default on all your outbound links — it’s counterproductive. Google considers a site with no outgoing dofollow links whatsoever as suspicious or selfish. Keep your editorial links dofollow; it’s a signal of quality and integration into the web.
Should these attributes be applied retroactively to old content?
Yes, if the volume of unqualified links is significant. A site with 10,000 comments accumulated over 5 years without ugc is a ticking time bomb. Prioritize pages that are still indexed and those that still receive traffic.
For old partnerships, it’s more delicate. If the partnership is still active and compensated, add sponsored immediately. If it is inactive but the link remains, assess its relevance: either remove it, qualify it, or leave it as dofollow if it is truly editorial.
- Spider the site and export all outbound links with their current attributes
- Segment by type: comments, partnerships, advertisements, editorial links
- Apply rel=ugc to all unmoderated comments
- Apply rel=sponsored to all links resulting from financial compensations or benefits
- Check the syntax: spaces between attributes, no commas
- Establish a comment moderation policy with default attributes
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le rel=nofollow empêche-t-il complètement le transfert de PageRank ?
Peut-on combiner plusieurs attributs de lien comme rel="sponsored ugc" ?
Faut-il mettre rel=sponsored sur un lien d'affiliation ?
Un site sans aucun lien dofollow sortant est-il pénalisé par Google ?
Comment gérer les anciens partenariats dont on ne sait plus s'ils étaient rémunérés ?
🎥 From the same video 2
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 26/07/2019
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