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Official statement

Google's index is updated continuously as new pages are discovered and added. There is no specific date for index updates.
21:35
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 47:45 💬 EN 📅 10/02/2015 ✂ 9 statements
Watch on YouTube (21:35) →
Other statements from this video 8
  1. 1:02 Les sous-domaines sont-ils vraiment traités comme des sites distincts par Google ?
  2. 1:33 Google évalue-t-il vraiment chaque page individuellement ou pèse-t-il encore l'autorité du domaine ?
  3. 3:08 Votre hébergeur web plombe-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
  4. 5:21 Faut-il vraiment se limiter à une seule balise H1 par page ?
  5. 17:41 Faut-il vraiment cibler géographiquement son domaine .com dans Search Console ?
  6. 38:04 Refondre son design sans toucher au contenu : vraiment sans risque SEO ?
  7. 44:04 Faut-il limiter les pages de catégories et de tags pour éviter une pénalité SEO ?
  8. 45:42 Faut-il vraiment utiliser des redirections 301 pour tous les changements d'URL permanents ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that its index updates continuously, without a fixed timetable or refresh cycles. In practice, your new pages can be indexed at any time, and content changes are taken into account without any predictable delay. This statement sidesteps the timing issue but obscures the underlying factors that actually influence indexing speed: crawl budget, site authority, content freshness.

What you need to understand

What does a 'continuous' update of the index actually mean?

Google refers to continuous updates to indicate that there is no planned processing window. Unlike some historical search engines that compiled their indices at regular intervals, Google integrates new pages and changes in real time.

Crawling, indexing, and refreshing content occur in parallel and asynchronously. A page could be discovered today, crawled tomorrow, indexed in 48 hours, or in three weeks. No fixed pattern. This is both true and frustrating: true because there is indeed no weekly batch, frustrating because this continuity masks the opaque resource allocation logic.

For a practitioner, this statement means it is useless to await a specific calendar event to see their pages accounted for. But it says nothing about the factors that speed up or slow down integration into the index.

Why does Google insist on the absence of a specific date?

Because this wording cuts short questions like 'when will my page be indexed?'. Google does not want to commit to deadlines or perpetuate the idea that there are favorable windows for publishing content.

Behind this communication lies a technical reality: indexation depends on multiple variables (crawl budget, page popularity, site update frequency, perceived content quality). Google cannot—or does not want to—provide SLAs for indexing because it is contingent upon the overall ecosystem of the site and its trust signals.

In other words, this statement is an elegant way of saying: 'We index when we can, based on our priorities.' This is honest but not actionable for those seeking to anticipate or optimize the speed of content integration.

What are the real parameters that influence this 'continuity'?

The crawl budget remains the primary lever. If Googlebot visits infrequently, the continuity is purely theoretical. A site with low authority, a heavy architecture, or recurring server errors will be visited less frequently and thus integrated more slowly.

The freshness of content also plays a role: a site that publishes daily with regular frequency sees its new pages crawled more quickly than a site that publishes once a quarter. Google adjusts its crawls based on the observed editorial velocity.

Finally, the immediate popularity of a page matters. A URL that quickly receives external links or social signals will be prioritized for a quick crawl. This is a virtuous circle hard to initiate for low-traffic sites.

  • The index updates continuously, but the speed of integration varies radically by site.
  • No fixed schedule governs indexing, but resource allocation logic applies.
  • Crawl budget, authority, freshness, and popularity determine the speed of consideration.
  • This statement offers no concrete optimization levers—it describes a state of affairs without a user manual.
  • For an SEO, the issue remains to maximize the signals that trigger frequent crawls, not to passively await hypothetical indexing.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, broadly speaking. It is indeed observed that there is no favored time window for indexing. Pages published on a Monday morning can be indexed in 2 hours, while those published on a Friday evening can take 10 days. No reliable hourly or weekly patterns.

However, this continuity does not mean equitable treatment. News sites, major media outlets, or high-authority platforms benefit from near-instant crawls. Smaller sites may have to wait weeks. Google is correct in asserting there is no fixed date, but it sidesteps the matter of algorithmic prioritization that creates massive discrepancies in indexing speed.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

The first nuance is that 'discovered' does not mean 'indexed'. Google can crawl a page continuously without ever including it in the search index if it does not meet its quality criteria. The distinction between crawling, indexing, and ranking is systematically blurred in official communication.

The second nuance is that this continuity concerns the global index, but not necessarily the different layers of the index. Google has multiple levels of caching, freshness, and prioritization. A page may be technically indexed but relegated to a secondary layer that never serves results unless for an ultra-specific query. [To be verified]: Google does not publicly document this layered architecture, but many tests suggest it exists.

The third point is that continuity does not preclude mass re-indexing campaigns following certain core updates or algorithm adjustments. There are sometimes synchronized recrawl waves that contradict the idea of a purely random flow. It is hard to say if this is an artifact or a deliberate process.

In what cases does this rule not apply or prove misleading?

For sites under manual or algorithmic penalty, 'continuity' becomes fictitious. Google can freeze or drastically slow down the crawling of a suspicious domain without clearly notifying it. In this case, the absence of a specific date becomes a euphemism for 'we no longer crawl'.

Sites with heavy technical issues (chain redirects, recurring 5xx errors, massive duplicate content) also suffer from crawl budget degradation, making 'continuity' theoretical. Google can technically crawl every day, but if 80% of requests return errors, effective indexing stagnates.

Finally, for orphan pages (with no internal or external links), continuity is nonexistent: they will never be discovered and thus never indexed, even if Google 'updates continuously'. This statement presupposes that your pages are accessible via a linking path, which is not always the case.

Attention: This communication from Google does not provide any indicators to diagnose an indexing problem. If your pages are not indexed after several weeks, this statement will not help you identify the cause. It merely tells you that you cannot blame an update schedule.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete actions can be taken to maximize indexing speed?

First reflex: optimize the crawl budget. Remove unnecessary pages, fix server errors, lighten redirect chains. The more efficiently Googlebot can crawl, the faster your new pages will be taken into account. Continuity of the index serves no purpose if the bot never visits.

Second lever: structure your internal linking so that new pages are accessible within a maximum of 3 clicks from the homepage. An orphan page or one buried in a deep hierarchy will not be discovered quickly, if ever. Google follows links—if you don’t create them, the continuity of the index won’t change anything.

Third action: push your URLs through Search Console ('Request Indexing' feature) for priority content. This is not a guarantee, but it often speeds up the initial crawl. For campaign launches or strategic updates, it is a useful boost, even if Google states it's 'not necessary'.

What errors should be avoided to not hinder indexing?

Do not overload your robots.txt file with overly broad disallow rules. A misplaced disallow can block access to entire sections without you realizing it. Regularly check that your strategic pages are not mistakenly blacklisted.

Avoid accidental noindex tags. There are still sites in production with noindex tags inherited from pre-production. If Google crawls continuously but sees a noindex, the page will never be indexed. Regularly audit your meta tags and HTTP headers.

Do not rely solely on automatically generated XML sitemaps without checking their relevance. A sitemap of 50,000 URLs where 30,000 return 404s or redirects degrades your quality signal and slows the crawl of valid pages. Quality over quantity.

How can you verify that your site is indeed benefiting from this 'continuity' of indexing?

Check the coverage and crawl reports in Search Console. If you publish regularly but your pages take weeks to appear in the index, it is a sign that the crawl budget is insufficient or that technical issues are hindering the process.

Test with 'site:' queries to verify the indexing of recent pages. This is a basic check but allows for rapid detection of a blockage. If your content does not appear after several days, dig deeper: technical error, insufficient quality, or lack of links?

Monitor crawl frequency via server logs. If Googlebot only visits once a week, the 'continuity' of the index is relative. Compare the frequency of visits with your publication rate: if there is a significant discrepancy, you have an optimization lever to activate.

  • Optimize the crawl budget by cleaning up unnecessary pages and fixing server errors.
  • Structure internal linking so that new pages are accessible in less than 3 clicks.
  • Push priority URLs via Search Console to speed up initial crawling.
  • Regularly audit noindex tags, robots.txt, and sitemaps to avoid unintentional blocks.
  • Monitor coverage reports and server logs to diagnose indexing slowdowns.
  • Test with 'site:' queries to check the effective integration of new pages into the index.
The absence of a fixed calendar for indexing does not mean you should be passive. On the contrary, you must create the technical and editorial conditions for Google to prioritize your site in its continuous flow. Crawl budget, internal linking, content quality, and page accessibility are the real levers. If these optimizations seem complex to orchestrate alone, especially on larger sites or heavy technical architectures, the support of a specialized SEO agency can help you structure an effective indexing strategy and diagnose invisible obstacles.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Est-ce que soumettre mon sitemap XML accélère l'indexation ?
Le sitemap aide Google à découvrir vos URLs, mais ne garantit ni vitesse ni indexation. Il facilite la détection des nouvelles pages, surtout si votre maillage interne est faible, mais le crawl budget et la qualité du contenu restent déterminants.
Pourquoi certaines de mes pages ne sont-elles jamais indexées malgré cette mise à jour continue ?
Trois causes principales : problème technique (noindex, robots.txt, erreur serveur), contenu jugé de faible qualité par Google, ou page orpheline sans lien interne ni externe. La continuité ne change rien si la page n'est pas accessible ou pas éligible.
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant de s'inquiéter qu'une page ne soit pas indexée ?
Sur un site avec un bon crawl budget, 48 à 72 heures suffisent pour voir une page apparaître. Au-delà d'une semaine, commencez à investiguer : vérifiez Search Console, logs serveur, et requête « site: ». Passé 15 jours, c'est un signal d'alerte.
La fonction « Demander une indexation » dans Search Console est-elle vraiment utile ?
Elle peut accélérer le crawl initial pour des pages stratégiques, mais elle ne court-circuite pas les critères de qualité. Google traite la demande quand il le souhaite, parfois en quelques heures, parfois en plusieurs jours. Utile, mais pas magique.
Est-ce que publier la nuit ou le week-end ralentit l'indexation ?
Non. Google crawle 24h/24, 7j/7, sans période privilégiée. Le moment de publication n'impacte pas la vitesse d'indexation. Seuls comptent la fréquence de crawl de votre site et la qualité de votre contenu.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 47 min · published on 10/02/2015

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