Official statement
Other statements from this video 16 ▾
- 1:05 Is it true that passages serve as a separate index in Google?
- 2:06 How can you structure your pages so that Google recognizes indexable passages?
- 3:11 Should you really optimize your pages for featured snippets passages?
- 5:14 Are 301 redirects really enough during a site migration?
- 8:26 Is it really necessary to merge your pages to climb in the SERPs?
- 8:26 Should you really consolidate your pages, or could you risk losing strategic traffic?
- 12:10 Should you really block the indexing of all your e-commerce facets?
- 12:10 Does Google really consolidate paginated pages into a single entity?
- 14:47 Can lazy loading block Google from indexing your content?
- 18:26 Should you optimize your content for emojis in SEO?
- 23:54 How does Google decide when to show images in search results?
- 27:07 Is the context of images really more important than their visual content for Google?
- 29:06 Does Google really index HTTPS even with an invalid SSL certificate?
- 45:30 Is it true that translated content is free from duplicate content issues in Google's eyes?
- 46:33 Can lazy loading without dimensions really jeopardize your CLS score?
- 49:01 Do 301 redirects really pass SEO juice even when the content changes completely?
Google confirms that a structural overhaul with new URLs and a new internal linking can directly impact rankings. A page that loses its strategic internal links will drop positions, even if the content remains the same. The final impact depends on the SEO quality of the new architecture: it can perform better or worse than the old one, depending on your linking and hierarchy choices.
What you need to understand
Why does site structure influence ranking so much?
The structure of a site is not just a matter of usability. It determines how internal PageRank flows between your pages. Each internal link transmits a portion of this authority, and Google relies on this distribution to assess the relative importance of each URL.
When you modify the hierarchy or create new URLs, you disrupt this balance. A page that previously received 15 internal links from strategic sections may suddenly only receive 3 from peripheral areas. The engine then reinterprets its weight within your content ecosystem.
What happens when we change URLs?
Google must relearn your site. Even with perfect 301 redirects, there is a transitional phase where the engine recalibrates the signals. The old URLs pass on their history, but not instantly — and not always 100%.
The internal linking plays a critical role during this period. If your new structure buries an important category three clicks from the home, where it was previously accessible in one click, expect drops. This is where it gets tricky: many redesigns overlook this linking map.
Can the new structure improve performance?
Absolutely. A well-thought-out restructuring can boost your positions if it corrects flaws in the old architecture. For example, isolating weak content in tight silos, or concentrating link juice on your priority commercial pages.
But Mueller highlights a crucial point: the impact depends on the SEO quality of the new structure. In other words, changing just for the sake of changing guarantees nothing. A strong editorial and technical logic is needed; otherwise, you risk sacrificing gains without compensation.
- The distribution of internal PageRank is recalculated as soon as you modify the links between pages
- 301 redirects mitigate but do not cancel the impact of a URL change
- A strategic page that loses its internal links will mechanically lose ranking
- Improvement is possible if the new structure better meets search intents and prioritizes content better
- Timing matters: Google needs to recrawl and reindex before stabilizing new rankings
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes, and that's even an understatement. Among dozens of observed migrations, major restructurings consistently cause turbulence. What varies is the magnitude and duration. A poorly prepared overhaul can slash organic traffic by 30 to 60% for several months.
Mueller remains reserved in his wording — perhaps too reserved. He does not quantify the risks or recovery times. [To verify]: how long does it take for Google to stabilize rankings after a major redesign? Field reports range from 3 weeks to 6 months depending on the size of the site and the quality of redirects.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
First point: not all structural changes are equal. Modifying the hierarchy without changing URLs (just by reorganizing the menu) has far less impact than a total overhaul with CMS change and new URLs. Mueller conflates the two cases, which can be misleading.
Second nuance: crawl speed plays a significant role. A site with a limited crawl budget will take weeks to be fully reindexed, prolonging the phase of uncertainty. A site crawled daily will fare better. This variable is never mentioned in the statement.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
If you do not change either the URLs or the internal linking, just the visual design or the CMS while retaining the same routes, the impact will be negligible. Many confuse “redesign” with “technical migration.” Switching from WordPress to Next.js without altering permalink structure is transparent to Google if done correctly.
Another edge case: one-page niche sites or very flat sites (everything one click from the home). Here, the notion of “structure” loses its relevance. But as soon as you reach a few hundred pages with subcategories, Mueller's statement becomes critical again.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do before restructuring a site?
First, map the existing structure. Export your current internal linking with a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) and identify the pages that receive the most internal links. These are your pillars: you cannot afford to weaken them. Also document the URLs that generate organic traffic, even if they seem secondary.
Next, model the new structure before coding it. On paper or in a spreadsheet, design the new linking. Ensure that each strategic page retains an equivalent (or greater) number of internal links from comparable weight areas. If you move a category, recreate the linking paths that fed its authority.
How to limit damage during migration?
Prepare a comprehensive redirect plan. Every old URL must point to its most relevant new version, without redirect chains. Test it in pre-production with HTTP 200 codes everywhere, then deploy. Use Search Console to submit a new sitemap as soon as it goes live.
During the following 4 to 6 weeks, monitor daily your positions on strategic queries. An automated rank tracking tool is essential. If a page drops abnormally, check that it is still receiving its historical internal links and is properly indexed. Sometimes a simple oversight in the redirect plan causes avoidable losses.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided?
Never alter the structure without analyzing the SEO consequences beforehand. Too many redesigns are led by design or marketing, without consulting the SEO team prior to hierarchy choices. The result: the carnage is discovered after launch, when it’s too late to fix without breaking everything again.
Another classic mistake: underestimating the stabilization time. Many expect a recovery in 2-3 weeks. In reality, on a medium-sized site, it often takes 2 to 3 months for Google to have fully recrawled all URLs, reevaluated signals, and stabilized SERPs. Accounting for this delay in your business roadmap is crucial.
- Crawl the existing site to capture the internal linking and identify key pages
- Model the new structure and ensure internal linking remains coherent
- Prepare a complete 301 redirect file, tested in pre-prod
- Submit the new XML sitemap immediately after the switch
- Monitor positions and indexing for at least 6 weeks
- Audit server logs to spot any 404 errors or redirect loops
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour que les classements se stabilisent après une restructuration ?
Les redirections 301 conservent-elles 100 % du PageRank ?
Peut-on restructurer un site sans perdre de positions ?
Faut-il prévenir Google avant une migration structurelle ?
Que faire si une page clé perd du ranking après la refonte ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 30/10/2020
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