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Official statement

Google generally does not consider legally duplicated content, such as terms and conditions required by law, to be a major issue for SEO, unless it is perceived as spammy or keyword-stuffed.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 0:32 💬 EN 📅 22/07/2013 ✂ 2 statements
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Other statements from this video 1
  1. 0:32 Le contenu légal pénalise-t-il vraiment le référencement de votre site ?
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Official statement from (12 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that duplicate content imposed by legal obligations (terms and conditions, legal notices, user agreements) typically does not impact rankings, unless there is clear over-optimization. This tolerance applies only to legally required content, not to tactical or accidental duplications. The challenge for SEOs: precisely identify what falls under 'legal' and avoid keyword stuffing in these sections.

What you need to understand

What exactly does Google mean by 'legally duplicated content'?

Google refers to texts mandated by regulations that sites must publish, often in identical or very similar formats across multiple sites. Legal notices, standardized terms and conditions, GDPR privacy policies, and mandatory e-commerce withdrawal clauses fall into this category.

These contents are duplicated across thousands of sites because they meet specific legal requirements. A law firm may provide the same template for terms and conditions to 500 clients. A WordPress plugin generates identical GDPR notices across 10,000 sites.

Why is this statement necessary now?

For years, SEO practitioners have feared that any duplicate content could harm their SEO, including legal texts. This paranoia has led some to artificially rewrite their terms and conditions or block them via robots.txt, sometimes creating legal compliance problems.

Google clarifies its position: the engine understands that certain content cannot be unique by nature. The algorithm distinguishes between mandatory technical duplication and intentional SEO manipulation.

What is the limit of this tolerance?

The statement specifies two cases where duplicated legal content becomes problematic: when it is used as a vector for spam or stuffed with keywords. In practical terms, if your terms and conditions contain 47 occurrences of 'cheap life insurance' while you sell lawn mowers, that’s spam.

Similarly, creating 200 pages of slightly varied 'terms of use' to target long-tail queries constitutes manipulation. Google detects these patterns through semantic and contextual analysis of the content.

  • Duplication of legal content: legal notices, standard terms and conditions, GDPR privacy policies, mandatory withdrawal clauses
  • Google's tolerance: no penalty if the content stays within functional bounds without over-optimization
  • Red line: keyword stuffing, artificial multiplication of legal pages, spam usage
  • Critical distinction: this exception does NOT cover duplicated product sheets, identical category descriptions, or copied editorial content

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, but with important nuances. Sites with duplicated legal notices have indeed not faced visible penalties for years. Real-world tests show that Google generally ignores these sections in its calculation of harmful duplication.

However, the definition of 'legal' remains vague in the statement. Google does not clarify whether marketing disclaimers, product warranty conditions, or user guidelines fall within this scope. [To be verified] This grey area may lead to contradictory interpretations depending on the sector.

In what cases does this rule not provide protection?

Beware of the trap of abusive extension. Some sites attempt to justify any duplication by labeling it as 'legal'. Identical service descriptions on 50 local pages are not legal content. Repeated commercial clauses in each product sheet are not either.

The tolerance applies only to texts imposed by law, not to your editorial choices. If you duplicate content to save time or out of laziness, this statement does not protect you. Google evaluates the context and intent behind the duplication.

What risk remains despite this clarification?

The real concern is not direct penalty but dilution effect. If 40% of your total content is legally duplicated text, Google may view your site as lacking in unique content. You are not penalized, but you also do not stand out.

Moreover, the statement 'generally not a problem' leaves a loophole for exceptions. In highly competitive sectors or for high-value queries, such duplication could become a comparative disadvantage against competitors offering 100% original content.

Note: Do not confuse Google's tolerance with SEO optimization. A site may not be penalized while still underperforming due to an unfavorable unique/duplicate content ratio.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you accurately identify what counts as legal content?

Start by auditing your mandatory pages: legal notices, terms and conditions, privacy policy, withdrawal conditions, cookies. Ensure they meet actual legal requirements (GDPR, Consumer Code, sector guidelines). Anything not mandated by law does not benefit from this exception.

Next, analyze the unique/legal content ratio on your mixed pages. A product page with 150 words of original description and 800 words of terms and conditions poses a problem. Isolate legal texts in dedicated sections instead of mixing them with editorial content.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Never stuff your terms and conditions with strategic keywords under the pretext that Google tolerates them. This is exactly the spam behavior targeted by the statement. Legal clauses must remain functional and neutral. Any over-optimization exposes you to manual reclassification.

Also avoid creating artificial variants of your legal texts to multiply pages. Ten versions of your privacy policy with minor variations to target geographical niches is detectable manipulation. Google identifies these patterns through pattern analysis.

What strategy should you adopt to optimize despite duplication?

Focus your efforts on differentiating content. If your legal notices are duplicated, compensate with ultra-detailed product descriptions, exclusive user guides, and in-depth FAQs. The overall ratio remains your best indicator of SEO health.

For sites with a lot of mandatory legal content, use canonical tags wisely. If you must display the same terms and conditions across multiple domains, consolidate signals towards a master version. Consider lazy loading or modal display for lengthy texts that dilute the main content.

  • Physically isolate duplicated legal content in dedicated sections (/legal-notices, /terms-and-conditions)
  • Verify that each legal text meets a specific legal obligation
  • Measure the unique/duplicate content ratio per page (target: minimum 70% unique)
  • Remove any strategically inserted keywords in legal clauses
  • Use canonical tags to consolidate multiple versions of the same legal text
  • Compensate for legal duplication by investing more in original editorial content
Google's tolerance for duplicated legal content does not absolve you from having an ambitious unique content strategy. This exception covers your legal obligations, not your editorial choices. For sites facing complex situations—delicate balance between legal compliance and SEO performance, technical adjustments on content architecture, fine optimization of the unique/duplicate ratio—the support of a specialized SEO agency helps avoid pitfalls and build a tailored strategy that meets both Google’s requirements and regulatory constraints.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les conditions de garantie produit sont-elles considérées comme du contenu légal par Google ?
Cela dépend. Si la garantie répond à une obligation légale (garantie légale de conformité), oui. Si c'est une garantie commerciale facultative, elle relève du contenu marketing classique et la duplication peut poser problème.
Dois-je bloquer mes CGV en robots.txt pour éviter la duplication ?
Non, c'est même contre-productif. Google a besoin d'explorer ces pages pour comprendre qu'elles sont légales. Bloquer l'accès empêche cette distinction et peut créer des problèmes de trust. Laissez-les accessibles.
Un site multilingue avec CGV traduites identiquement dans 15 langues est-il protégé ?
Oui, si les traductions sont fidèles aux textes légaux obligatoires. La duplication entre langues de contenus légaux n'est pas problématique. Assurez-vous que les balises hreflang sont correctement implémentées.
Comment Google distingue-t-il contenu légal dupliqué et spam déguisé ?
Via analyse sémantique contextuelle et détection de patterns. Un texte légal suit une structure juridique reconnaissable, contient un vocabulaire spécifique neutre, et n'accumule pas de mots-clés commerciaux hors contexte.
Les disclaimers médicaux ou financiers bénéficient-ils de cette exception ?
Probablement oui s'ils sont imposés par des autorités de régulation (AMF, ANSM). La clé est l'obligation réglementaire documentable. En cas de doute, consultez vos textes de référence sectoriels pour justifier la nécessité.
🏷 Related Topics
Content JavaScript & Technical SEO Penalties & Spam

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