Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 1:42 Faut-il vraiment corriger toutes les erreurs d'exploration dans Google Search Console ?
- 7:32 Le rendu dynamique peut-il pénaliser votre site si Google détecte des différences de contenu ?
- 9:29 L'indexation mobile-first impose-t-elle vraiment un site mobile-friendly ?
- 11:53 Faut-il vraiment rediriger les anciennes versions de vos fichiers CSS et JavaScript ?
- 14:40 Un CDN améliore-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
- 17:06 Les redirections d'images préservent-elles vraiment le classement dans Google Images ?
- 17:06 Faut-il vraiment éviter de changer les URLs de vos images pour préserver leur visibilité dans Google Images ?
- 19:43 Changer le thème d'un site peut-il vraiment tuer votre visibilité organique ?
- 21:15 Le cloaking peut-il être acceptable pour Googlebot ?
- 21:39 Faut-il vraiment fusionner tous vos sites locaux en un seul domaine principal ?
- 25:16 Les sitemaps XML peuvent-ils apparaître dans les résultats de recherche Google ?
Google announces the shutdown of several features in the old Search Console, with partial migration to the new interface. Some sections will disappear without immediate replacements, directly impacting SEO tracking workflows. It is critical to audit your monitoring processes and identify alternatives to avoid losing visibility on your critical data.
What you need to understand
Which features are at risk of disappearing?
Google does not specify each affected tool in this announcement, creating operational uncertainty for SEO teams. The old Search Console interface still houses reports that some practitioners use daily, particularly for historical analyses or specific exports.
The gradual migration to the new interface comes with a loss of granularity on certain metrics. Features like URL inspection, certain advanced filters, or detailed indexing data may disappear without a direct functional equivalent. The ambiguity maintained by Google regarding the exact timeline complicates anticipation.
Why is Google doing this?
Google's strategy is to modernize its infrastructure and concentrate resources on a single platform. The old Search Console is built on aging architecture, costly to maintain and incompatible with recent technical advancements in the engine.
However, this streamlining comes at the cost of certain advanced features that only seasoned SEOs were using. Google prioritizes a simplified public interface at the expense of precise diagnostic tools. This choice reveals a product orientation that does not necessarily meet the needs of professionals.
When will these changes take effect?
Google rarely communicates precise dates for such transitions. Closures typically occur in waves, with notifications in the interface a few weeks before the definitive shutdown. Some features disappear without notice when Google determines usage traffic to be too low.
The new Search Console evolves in iterative mode — features gradually appear, but not always at the time the old version is deactivated. This temporal gap creates holes in monitoring capabilities, sometimes lasting several months.
- Some sections of the old Search Console will close without immediate replacement, creating temporary blind spots in SEO tracking
- The migration to the new interface is not symmetrical — not all features will be transferred
- Google favors a simplified and public approach at the expense of some advanced tools
- The transition timelines remain vague and unpredictable, making operational anticipation difficult
- It is imperative to identify third-party tools or custom scripts now that could compensate for functional losses
SEO Expert opinion
Does this transition indicate a disengagement from professional SEOs?
Let's be honest: Google has never designed Search Console as a tool for SEO experts, but as a basic diagnostic interface for ordinary webmasters. The evolution towards an even simpler platform confirms this orientation. The sharp features we utilize? Side effects that Google has never really owned up to.
The issue is that many agencies and consultants have built entire workflows around these tools. Closing sections without equivalents forces an unchosen technical migration. And contrary to what Google implies, the new Search Console does not always compensate for the loss — some exports are less detailed, some filters less precise. [To be verified] in the long term if Google will really fill all the gaps.
What data is at risk of being permanently lost?
The critical point concerns the history. The old Search Console retains data for periods sometimes longer than the new interface. If you do not export this information before the shutdown, it will disappear. Google does not guarantee any backwards compatibility of access once the migration is enacted.
Another blind spot: some reports specific to structured data or detailed crawl errors have not yet found their place in the new version. Detailed indexing logs, crawl analysis segmented by Googlebot type — all elements that may become inaccessible. Practically? Be prepared to compensate with third-party tools or in-house solutions.
In what scenarios does this evolution pose a real operational problem?
For a basic showcase site, the impact will be marginal. But if you manage an e-commerce site with thousands of pages, a media platform with multiple subdomains, or a complex international network, the loss of granularity becomes crippling. Simplified reports do not always allow for detailed segmentation of issues.
Teams that have automated data extractions via the API of the old Search Console will need to rewrite part of their technical stack. The API of the new version does not expose exactly the same endpoints or data structures. Plan for development and testing time — and anticipate bugs during the transition.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should you take before the shutdown?
First reflex: export all critical data from the old Search Console that you might want to consult later. Performance reports, historical crawl errors, inbound link data — everything that can serve as a reference for future comparative analyses. Do not wait for the shutdown notification, it often comes too late.
Then, map out your current monitoring processes. Which reports do you consult weekly? What alerts have you set up? Identify those that rely exclusively on the old interface and look for their equivalents in the new one — or third-party tools that could compensate.
What alternatives exist to offset the lost features?
If you lose access to detailed crawl reports, Google Search Console API (new version) combined with BigQuery can restore some of the granularity. But that requires technical skills and a cloud budget. For SMEs and solo consultants, this is not always realistic.
Tools like Screaming Frog, OnCrawl, or Botify can partially compensate by simulating crawl and cross-referencing with the available Search Console data. Some already offer API connectors that adapt to the new interface. Invest in these solutions now to avoid visibility gaps post-migration.
How can I check that my site won’t be negatively impacted?
Start by thoroughly testing the new Search Console. Replicate your usual workflows and note the shortcomings. If an essential report is not yet available, document it and look for a workaround right now — not in the urgency post-shutdown.
Set up redundant alerts via multiple channels: email from Search Console, external monitoring via third-party tools, in-house scripts querying the API. Redundancy protects against migration bugs or unannounced changes in data structure.
- Export critical historical data from the old Search Console before the final shutdown
- Map all SEO processes that depend on features at risk of disappearing
- Thoroughly test the new interface to identify functional gaps before the forced migration
- Evaluate third-party tools (Screaming Frog, OnCrawl, Botify) as compensation solutions
- Rewrite or adapt automation scripts connected to the old Search Console API
- Set up redundant alerts to avoid missing any critical notifications during the transition
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je continuer à utiliser l'ancienne Search Console indéfiniment ?
Mes données historiques seront-elles transférées automatiquement vers la nouvelle Search Console ?
La nouvelle Search Console offre-t-elle les mêmes capacités d'export que l'ancienne ?
Mes scripts d'automatisation connectés à l'ancienne API vont-ils cesser de fonctionner ?
Google prévoit-il de compenser toutes les fonctionnalités supprimées ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h08 · published on 11/01/2019
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.