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Official statement

An article title must be consistent across the page, including the title tag, h1, and anchor text, to minimize extraction errors and avoid hyperlinking.
16:26
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:36 💬 EN 📅 25/03/2015 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube (16:26) →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. 3:42 Faut-il vraiment trois chiffres dans vos URLs pour être indexé sur Google News ?
  2. 5:44 Les sitemaps Google News améliorent-ils vraiment l'indexation de vos articles ?
  3. 7:11 Faut-il vraiment resoumettre son sitemap Google News après chaque correction d'erreur ?
  4. 14:16 Faut-il vraiment limiter les méta-tags à 12 mots-clés dans Google News ?
  5. 18:34 Google News : pourquoi la date affichée ne correspond-elle pas à la vraie publication ?
  6. 20:10 Pourquoi limiter à deux labels par article sur Google News ?
  7. 22:58 Les erreurs d'article Google bloquent-elles vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
  8. 23:28 Google News ignore-t-il toujours le mobile-friendly alors que Google Search l'a déployé ?
  9. 24:13 Blogger peut-il vraiment rivaliser avec WordPress pour référencer un site d'actualités dans Google News ?
  10. 26:38 Comment signaler efficacement votre contenu local à Google News ?
  11. 32:18 Google News privilégie-t-il vraiment le HTTPS pour l'indexation ?
  12. 36:20 Peut-on ajouter des parametres UTM dans Google News sans risque pour l'indexation ?
  13. 45:58 Les pop-ups peuvent-ils exclure votre site de Google News ?
  14. 48:36 Google News bannit-il vraiment les contenus marketing de son index ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that article titles must be identical in the title tag, h1, and anchors pointing to the page to avoid extraction errors in Google News. This requirement aims to reduce the risk of algorithmic misinterpretation that could prevent indexing in News. Specifically, any semantic or creative variation between these elements signals a warning to Google’s automatic extraction systems.

What you need to understand

Does Google News really depend on such fragile extraction?

Google News operates with automatic extraction systems that attempt to identify the main title of an article from multiple sources: the HTML title tag, the visible h1, and internal or external anchors. When these three elements diverge, the algorithm must make a choice. And that’s where the problem arises.

Stacie Chan indicates that these inconsistencies generate extraction errors which can lead to a misrepresentation of the article in Google News, or worse, to its outright exclusion. Google uses these titles to categorize, rank, and display news. A divergence between title and h1 creates ambiguity that the algorithm interprets as a signal of low editorial quality.

What does Google mean by “hyperlinking” an article title?

The phrase “avoid hyperlinking” needs clarification. Google recommends not turning the title itself into a clickable link if that link points to a page other than the article in question. This practice, common in certain news site layouts, creates additional confusion for automatic extraction.

Specifically, if your h1 is clickable and redirects to an author page or a category, Google may interpret that link as the main title and index the wrong page in News. Thus, the directive is twofold: strict consistency between title/h1/anchors, and no extraneous link on the main title.

Does this rule apply only to Google News?

Google specifies that this recommendation specifically targets Google News and its extraction systems. For normal search, a variation between title and h1 remains tolerated and can even be beneficial for targeting different queries. But for News, this is non-negotiable.

The reason lies in the real-time nature of News: algorithms must process thousands of articles per minute and have neither the time nor the capability to disambiguate conflicting signals. Consistency becomes a criterion of editorial reliability and an entry filter into the News index.

  • Strict consistency: title = h1 = internal and external anchor text pointing to the article
  • No extraneous links: the h1 should never point to another page than the article itself
  • News specificity: this requirement does not necessarily apply to regular search
  • Risk of exclusion: inconsistencies may lead to non-indexing in Google News

SEO Expert opinion

Is this directive consistent with traditional SEO practices?

Let’s be honest: this recommendation contradicts 15 years of good SEO practices that encourage varying title and h1 to broaden semantic coverage. In traditional SEO, a title optimized for clicks in SERPs and an h1 optimized for the page content represent a proven strategy. Google News imposes an inverse constraint here.

However, keep in mind: this rule applies exclusively to news sites eligible for Google News. If you do not publish real-time content, this directive probably does not concern you. The issue is that Google does not specify at what threshold of freshness or frequency this rule becomes binding. [To be verified] with your own Analytics and Search Console data.

Are “extraction errors” really common?

Google talks about “extraction errors,” but remains deliberately vague about their actual extent. I have observed on client news sites that title/h1 inconsistencies do not systematically lead to exclusion from News. Some articles with minor variations index without issue.

What seems to trigger errors is a strong semantic divergence: a title discussing politics and an h1 mentioning the economy, for example. Minor stylistic variations (adding a verb, rephrasing) appear to be tolerated in practice. But Google does not provide any precise threshold, which leads to strict application of the rule as a precaution.

When does this rule become counterproductive?

For content aggregators or sites that republish agency reports, strictly applying this rule can create massive duplicates of identical titles. If ten sites pick up the same AFP report with the same title/h1, Google News may only index one of them.

Another problematic case: multilingual sites that adapt their titles according to markets. An identical title in French and in English that is literally translated may lose all cultural appeal. Google does not clarify how to manage this contradiction between technical consistency and editorial relevance. [To be verified] with A/B testing in secondary markets.

If your site publishes more than 50 articles a day, an audit of title/h1/anchor consistency becomes critical. Automated CMS often generate invisible variations that could exclude entire segments of your production from Google News.

Practical impact and recommendations

What specific changes should you make to your templates?

The first action is to audit your CMS templates to identify automatic generators of title and h1. Many CMS automatically add the site name or category to the title, creating divergence with the h1. You need to enforce strict equality between these two tags for sections eligible for Google News.

The second point: check the anchors of your “Related Articles” widgets and internal navigation. If these anchors summarize or provide a shortened version of the title, Google may interpret them as the actual title. Always use the full and exact title in these anchors, even if you need to visually truncate it with CSS if necessary.

How can you verify that your articles comply with this rule?

Use a Screaming Frog or Oncrawl crawler with a custom extraction comparing title, h1, and internal anchor text. Export the lines where these three elements diverge, even slightly. On a news site publishing daily, this verification should be automated via API.

On the Google Search Console side, enable Google News reports if you have access and monitor specific indexing errors related to News. Unfortunately, Google does not always provide details on the exact cause of rejections. A cross-check with your server logs can reveal exclusion patterns related to title inconsistencies.

What errors should you absolutely avoid?

Don’t fall into the trap of over-optimization by creating identical titles that are too short or void of meaning. A title like “Election 2025” repeated identically in title/h1/anchors meets the consistency rule but will be penalized for lack of editorial substance. Google expects both consistency AND quality in writing.

Another frequent mistake: modifying the title after publication to improve CTR in traditional SERPs without changing the h1. On a News site, this practice becomes dangerous as it creates an inconsistency that can lead to rapid deindexing from Google News. If you optimize, do it everywhere simultaneously.

  • Enforce strict equality between title tag and h1 in article templates
  • Use the full and exact title in all internal anchors pointing to the article
  • Never turn the h1 into a clickable link to another page
  • Automate the verification of title/h1/anchor consistency via crawler
  • Monitor Google News indexing errors in Search Console
  • Avoid post-publication modifications that create discrepancies
Compliance with this Google News directive requires a thorough revision of your editorial workflows and CMS templates. Sites that publish dozens of articles daily must automate these checks to avoid massive exclusions from the News index. These technical optimizations combined with editorial challenges can quickly become complex to orchestrate internally. If your site generates a significant share of traffic via Google News, consulting a specialized SEO agency for media support may be wise for auditing, correcting, and maintaining this consistency without compromising your daily editorial output.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je appliquer cette règle de cohérence title/h1 sur l'ensemble de mon site ?
Non. Cette directive vise spécifiquement les articles éligibles à Google News. Pour les pages classiques (fiches produits, pages catégories, contenu evergreen), une variation entre title et h1 reste bénéfique pour couvrir différentes intentions de recherche.
Google sanctionne-t-il réellement les sites qui ne respectent pas cette cohérence dans News ?
Google parle d'« erreurs d'extraction » mais reste vague sur les conséquences exactes. En pratique, les incohérences fortes peuvent conduire à une non-indexation de l'article dans Google News, sans affecter son référencement dans la recherche classique. La pénalité est donc une exclusion ciblée, pas une sanction globale.
Puis-je ajouter le nom de mon site dans le title tout en gardant un h1 pur ?
Non, si l'article est destiné à Google News. La règle exige une stricte égalité entre title et h1. Si vous ajoutez le nom du site dans le title (ex: « Titre article | MonSite »), il doit également apparaître dans le h1, ce qui nuit généralement à la lisibilité.
Comment gérer les ancres de partage social qui reformulent souvent le titre ?
Les ancres de partage social (Open Graph, Twitter Cards) ne sont pas concernées par cette directive. Google parle spécifiquement des ancres HTML internes et externes pointant vers l'article. Vous pouvez donc varier vos og:title et twitter:title librement.
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle aux ancres externes provenant d'autres sites ?
Google recommande la cohérence mais ne peut évidemment pas contrôler les ancres externes. Cependant, si les principaux sites qui vous citent utilisent des ancres divergentes de votre title/h1, cela peut créer une confusion pour les systèmes d'extraction. Communiquez vos titres exacts aux partenaires qui vous reprennent.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Discover & News

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 25/03/2015

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