Official statement
Other statements from this video 23 ▾
- 6:05 Pourquoi Google ne peut-il pas garantir une récupération rapide après une pénalité Penguin ?
- 13:05 Hreflang suffit-il vraiment à régler tous les problèmes de duplicate content international ?
- 13:09 Le contenu dupliqué entre TLD fait-il vraiment chuter votre classement ?
- 14:57 Les balises hreflang transmettent-elles du PageRank entre versions linguistiques ?
- 16:31 Pourquoi votre site ne récupère-t-il pas son trafic après la levée d'une pénalité manuelle ?
- 18:26 Les SVG sont-ils réellement indexés par Google comme du contenu textuel ?
- 18:57 Faut-il vraiment supprimer immédiatement les pages d'événements passés ?
- 20:01 Le HTTPS fait-il vraiment décoller vos positions dans Google ?
- 22:03 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il sur la cohérence des URL pour hreflang et canonical ?
- 22:06 Pourquoi la cohérence des URL détermine-t-elle ce que Google indexe vraiment ?
- 23:03 Le temps de chargement impacte-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 23:23 Les algorithmes de Google éliminent-ils vraiment tout le spam de votre site ?
- 36:07 Comment Google pénalise-t-il vraiment les pages au contenu faible ou dupliqué ?
- 38:04 Google Tag Manager améliore-t-il vraiment la vitesse de votre site pour le SEO ?
- 41:38 Le contenu dupliqué impacte-t-il vraiment le classement des images sur Google ?
- 45:28 Les pages multi-localisations tuent-elles vraiment votre SEO ?
- 48:29 Pourquoi est-il plus difficile de sortir d'une pénalité Penguin que d'une action manuelle ?
- 52:08 Faut-il vraiment bloquer l'indexation des pages paginées ?
- 55:06 Faut-il vraiment privilégier les 404 aux redirections 301 quand on supprime du contenu ?
- 56:48 Le contenu repris avec ajouts contextuels est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
- 58:09 Meta robots vs X-Robots-Tag : Google applique-t-il vraiment le même traitement aux deux ?
- 60:37 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer un 404 plutôt qu'une redirection vers la page d'accueil ?
- 70:03 Lever une sanction manuelle suffit-il à récupérer son trafic après Penguin ?
Google states that paginated pages with unique content do not need to be blocked from indexing. The official recommendation focuses on using rel=next and rel=prev tags to structure pagination. In practice, this stance raises questions about managing crawl budget and the risk of ranking dilution on secondary pages.
What you need to understand
Why does Google recommend indexing paginated pages?
Google's logic is based on a simple principle: if a paginated page contains unique content, it can provide value to users who discover it directly through a specific query. Systematically blocking these pages from indexing would deprive Google of potentially relevant URLs for certain searches.
Let's take a concrete example. A page 3 of an e-commerce category may contain products that are not found anywhere else on the site. If a user is specifically searching for one of those products, Google could theoretically return that page 3 as a relevant result. This logic justifies the official position.
What do rel=next and rel=prev tags really mean?
These tags, introduced in 2011, signal to Google that a series of pages forms a logical sequence. The syntax is straightforward: place rel="prev" on the link to the previous page and rel="next" to the next one. The initial goal was to help Google understand the pagination structure.
However, real-world experience has shown that these tags do not always work as intended. Google has never regarded them as strict directives but rather as indicative signals. Their implementation has never guaranteed that Google would treat paginated pages in a particular manner, especially in consolidating signals on page 1.
When is the content of a paginated page truly unique?
This is where the ambiguity begins. Google talks about "unique content" without precisely defining this threshold. Does a page 15 of a blog category with 3 excerpts from articles already fully present elsewhere contain sufficiently unique content? The answer is never straightforward.
In practice, most paginated pages recycle elements (titles, excerpts, images) that already exist on the site. The template remains the same; only the central content changes. This situation creates a gray area where uniqueness is relative, and the decision to index or not becomes strategic rather than technical.
- Indexable paginated pages: they can theoretically respond to specific queries if their content is distinct enough
- rel=next/prev tags: indicative signals for Google, not strict directives or guarantees of behavior
- Unique content: a vague notion that depends on context and site structure, Google does not provide a precise threshold
- Crawl budget: excessively indexing paginated pages can dilute crawl resources on secondary pages
- Ranking risk: a page 8 can theoretically rank over a better-optimized pillar page
SEO Expert opinion
Is Google's recommendation consistent with field observations?
Let's be honest: Google's official position is technically correct but strategically questionable for most sites. On paper, yes, a paginated page can contain unique content. In reality, allowing the indexing of dozens or hundreds of paginated pages creates more problems than it solves.
Field tests show that Google indeed crawls and indexes these pages when they are accessible. However, their ranking performance is consistently lower than that of main pages. Worse: there are regular instances where a page 5 or 12 ranks for a generic query, cannibalizing a better-crafted category page. Google does not automatically consolidate signals, contrary to what the rel=next/prev tags might lead one to believe.
[To be verified]: Google claims these tags help structure pagination, but no public data proves they actually influence page processing. Since their introduction, field feedback has been mixed, with some sites reporting no difference with or without these tags.
What are the concrete risks of massively indexing paginated pages?
The first risk is crawl budget. Google allocates a limited number of crawl requests per site and per period. If you allow 200 pagination pages to be indexed in a blog category, Google will waste crawl budget on low-value pages at the expense of your strategic content.
The second, more insidious risk is ranking dilution. Google does not always know which page in your series should rank. As a result, it may choose a page 7 with fewer signals than a better-optimized page 1, simply because the specific content of that page 7 better matches a long-tail query. You then lose visibility on the main query.
The third point, rarely mentioned: user experience. A user who lands on a page 14 via Google does not always understand that they are in the middle of a series. They lack context, navigation is confusing, and the bounce rate skyrockets. Google may interpret these negative behavioral signals as a lack of relevance and degrade the ranking of the entire site.
When can this rule still be applied wisely?
There are exceptions where indexing paginated pages makes sense. Classified ad sites or second-hand product sites, for example, where each page contains truly unique items that are not accessible anywhere else. A page 5 of car listings may feature 20 vehicles completely different from page 1, with specific models, years, and prices.
Another case is forums and community sites where each discussion page contains different messages with genuinely unique textual content written by users. Here, blocking paginated pages would effectively hide relevant information for specific searches.
However, for most corporate sites, blogs, and traditional e-commerce, pagination remains more of a navigation element than a source of content to be indexed. The prudent recommendation is to test on a limited segment before generalizing.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done with paginated pages on your site?
The first step is to audit your current pagination. How many paginated pages are indexed? Use the command site:yourdomain.com/page/ in Google for a quick overview. Then, analyze in Search Console which pages are receiving impressions and clicks. If your pages 2+ generate less than 1% of total traffic, their indexing is probably pointless.
If you decide to block these pages, several methods exist. The cleanest: add a canonical tag on each paginated page pointing to page 1. This way, Google understands that the reference page is the first one while being able to crawl the subsequent ones to discover the content. A more radical alternative: use noindex on pages 2+, but be cautious of the risk of losing crawl on the content they contain.
Are rel=next and rel=prev tags still useful today?
Google officially announced in 2019 that it no longer uses these tags for indexing or consolidating paginated pages. However, they remain in many CMS and themes by default. Their presence is not harmful, but they no longer provide any direct SEO benefit according to Google itself.
So the question is: should they be removed? Not necessarily. Their implementation is generally automatic and resource-light. However, do not rely on them to solve your pagination issues. Focus on canonicals and noindex if you want to control indexing effectively.
How can classic pagination management mistakes be avoided?
The number one mistake is completely blocking crawl of paginated pages via robots.txt. If Google cannot crawl these pages, it cannot discover the content they contain, even if it is linked elsewhere. The result: you potentially lose important URLs that would only be accessible through pagination.
The second common mistake: implementing a canonical on page 2 to page 1 but forgetting to do so on pages 3, 4, 5, etc. Implementation must be systematic and automated across the entire series. An omission creates inconsistencies that Google detects and undermines trust in your technical signals.
The third trap: creating infinite paginations in JavaScript without a distinct URL for each segment. Google can crawl content loaded in JS, but the structure remains unclear to it. Prefer clean URLs with parameters or structure /page/2/, /page/3/, even if you load the content via AJAX. This facilitates crawl, indexing, and analysis in Search Console.
- Audit the number of indexed paginated pages via Search Console and site: commands:
- Check the traffic generated by pages 2+: if less than 1-2%, consider noindex or canonical
- Systematically implement canonicals to page 1 on all paginated pages
- Never block crawl of paginated pages via robots.txt (loss of content discovery)
- Test changes on a limited segment before generalizing to the entire site
- Monitor changes in crawl budget and rankings after changing strategy
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les balises rel=next et rel=prev sont-elles toujours recommandées par Google ?
Faut-il mettre un noindex sur toutes les pages paginées au-delà de la page 1 ?
Une page 5 peut-elle réellement se positionner mieux qu'une page 1 sur Google ?
Comment savoir si mes pages paginées consomment trop de crawl budget ?
Dois-je bloquer les pages paginées dans le robots.txt ?
🎥 From the same video 23
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h02 · published on 19/06/2015
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