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Official statement

For a developing news article, it is often preferable to keep a single page rather than create multiple pages. This allows all updates to accumulate on one page, facilitating the accumulation of PageRank and avoiding user confusion. Once the article is complete, it may be considered to create a new page for new topics.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1:33 💬 EN 📅 04/02/2013 ✂ 2 statements
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Other statements from this video 1
  1. 1:02 L'Authorship améliore-t-il vraiment l'indexation des articles d'actualité ?
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Official statement from (13 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends maintaining a unique URL for an evolving news topic instead of creating multiple articles. The goal is to concentrate PageRank on a single page and avoid signal dispersion. This approach directly questions the common practice of many media outlets that publish several successive articles on the same event, thereby diluting their authority.

What you need to understand

Why does Google insist on a unique URL for breaking news?

The reasoning is straightforward: each new URL starts at zero in terms of PageRank. When a media outlet publishes five different articles on the same developing event, it fragments its authority across five distinct pages. None of them becomes truly strong.

Google prefers pages that accumulate signals of relevance and authority over time. A regularly updated page sends a freshness signal without losing the SEO capital already built up. Backlinks point to a single destination, social shares focus, and click history strengthens.

How does this approach impact crawling and indexing?

Multiplying URLs on the same subject consumes crawl budget unnecessarily. Googlebot must discover, crawl, and index each new page. On high-volume sites, this waste can delay the indexing of genuinely new content.

A unique updated URL triggers a targeted and efficient recrawl. Google detects the change, quickly re-indexes, and the page maintains its position (or even improves it) due to the historical signals already acquired. The bot does not have to start from scratch.

What is the line between updating and a new topic?

Google mentions that once the article is "complete," one can consider a new page for new topics. The boundary remains blurry and depends on the editorial angle. If the event takes a radically different turn, a new article is justified.

Concrete example: a presidential election. Partial results, preliminary analyses, and official confirmation can coexist on the same URL. However, the analysis of the winner's program three days later probably deserves a dedicated page with a distinct angle. The criterion: is it an evolution or a completely new topic?

  • A unique URL concentrates PageRank and social signals on a single page
  • Regular updates trigger quick recrawls without diluting authority
  • Crawl budget is preserved by avoiding redundant pages
  • The transition to a new URL is justified when the angle changes radically, not just when the information evolves
  • User experience improves: a single bookmark, one page to follow for the complete story

SEO Expert opinion

Does this recommendation contradict practices observed in major media?

Absolutely. Most news media multiply articles on the same event, sometimes 10 to 15 distinct URLs for a single story evolving over 48 hours. Why? Because their business model relies on the volume of page views and advertising impressions.

From a pure SEO perspective, this is counterproductive. These sites compensate with a massive domain authority and constant inbound links. However, a niche media outlet or corporate blog cannot afford such dilution. Google does not say that the multi-URL method doesn’t work, but that it is not optimal for concentrating rankings.

What are the technical limits of this approach?

Updating an existing page poses CMS challenges. Many systems automatically generate a new URL for each publication. Modifying the editorial architecture to allow for successive updates on the same URL often requires custom development.

Another point: the management of editorial history. If an article evolves drastically (initial facts were wrong, angle changes completely), keeping the same URL may create confusion. Archives will show a version very different from the current one. It is essential to clearly document updates with visible timestamps. [To be verified]: Google does not specify how it handles modified content versus deleted/replaced content in its E-E-A-T evaluation.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If the event generates completely distinct sub-angles, creating separate URLs remains justified. Example: a political scandal. The initial announcement, in-depth journalistic investigation, legal analysis, and international reactions may each deserve their page with a distinct editorial angle.

Similarly, for evergreen content derived from news, a new URL is warranted. If a critical iOS bug first generates a news item "Apple fixes a security flaw," then a practical guide "How to protect your iPhone from this flaw," these represent two different search intents. The news captures immediate traffic, while the guide captures long-tail queries over several months.

Caution: Google does not provide any metrics to define when a topic is "complete." This gray area leaves room for editorial interpretation, and judgment errors can cost organic traffic.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you modify in your editorial workflow?

The first task: review the publication process. Instead of creating a new article with every twist, define an update protocol. The editor modifies the existing page, adds a dated section at the top ("Update 2:30 PM: ..."), and republishes with an updated lastmod tag in the XML sitemap.

Technically, ensure your CMS triggers a freshness signal on the server side. Some systems do not change the last modified date if only the content changes, depriving Google of the recrawl signal. Test with Search Console and force a URL inspection after a major update.

How to manage backlinks and social shares?

The advantage of a unique URL becomes evident here. All backlinks point to the same destination, accumulating link juice over time. Social shares on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook converge toward a single page, amplifying social signals.

But be cautious about caching in social networks. When you make significant content changes, Facebook and LinkedIn may display the old snippet for several hours. Use their debug tools (Facebook Sharing Debugger, LinkedIn Post Inspector) to force a cache refresh after every critical update.

When should you switch to a new URL?

Establish clear editorial criteria in advance. For example: if the treatment angle changes by more than 70%, create a new URL. If the target keywords completely pivot (from "2024 election polls" to "economic program of the elected"), create a new URL. If the target audience changes (from the general public to expert analysis), create a new URL.

Once the decision is made, don’t forget about internal linking. Link the initial article (now "complete") to the new derived content. This transfers some of the accumulated PageRank and guides the user in their thematic navigation. Without this link, you create isolated silos.

  • Configure your CMS to allow successive updates on the same URL with visible history
  • Make sure the lastmod tag in the XML sitemap updates automatically
  • Document each major modification with a visible timestamp for the user ("Updated on...")
  • Force a social cache refresh after each critical update using debug tools
  • Define an editorial decision matrix: when to update, when to create a new URL
  • Create internal linking between the original "mother" article and derived content once the topic is complete
Maintaining a unique URL for developing news maximizes PageRank, optimizes crawl budget, and enhances user experience. This approach, however, requires CMS adjustments and a rigorous editorial protocol. The line between updates and new content remains subjective, but the SEO gains justify the effort. For complex sites or large editorial teams, these optimizations may require advanced technical support. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can help structure this transition without disrupting existing systems and establish sustainable processes tailored to your editorial context.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je supprimer mes anciens articles sur un même sujet et tout fusionner sur une seule URL ?
Non, ne supprimez pas des contenus déjà indexés et qui génèrent du trafic. Gardez-les, mais liez-les entre eux avec un maillage interne cohérent. Pour les futurs sujets, appliquez la règle de l'URL unique dès le départ.
Comment signaler à Google qu'une page a été mise à jour significativement ?
Mettez à jour la balise <code>lastmod</code> dans votre sitemap XML, ajoutez un timestamp visible dans le contenu, et forcez une inspection d'URL dans Search Console si l'update est critique. Google recrawlera plus rapidement.
Les mises à jour fréquentes peuvent-elles nuire au ranking si le contenu change trop vite ?
Non, tant que les modifications améliorent la qualité et la fraîcheur. Google valorise les contenus actualisés. Évitez juste de changer radicalement l'angle sans raison, ce qui pourrait perturber la pertinence par rapport aux requêtes initiales.
Que faire si j'ai déjà publié 5 articles sur le même événement sur des URLs différentes ?
Identifiez l'article principal (celui qui performe le mieux ou qui a le plus de backlinks), consolidez le contenu des autres dedans, puis redirigez les URLs secondaires en 301 vers la principale. Vous récupérerez une partie du PageRank dispersé.
Cette approche fonctionne-t-elle aussi pour les sites e-commerce avec des produits en évolution ?
Oui, même principe. Si un produit évolue (nouveau modèle, mise à jour technique), mettez à jour la fiche existante plutôt que d'en créer une nouvelle. Gardez l'URL stable pour conserver l'historique des avis et des backlinks.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Discover & News Links & Backlinks Domain Name

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