What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

Core Web Vitals, including CLS, are not yet a ranking factor but will become one in May 2021 as part of the page experience. A CLS greater than 0.25 could negatively affect your SEO.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 13/11/2020 ✂ 40 statements
Watch on YouTube →
Other statements from this video 39
  1. 301 Redirect or Canonical for Merging Two Sites: What's the SEO Difference?
  2. How can you feature in Top Stories without being a news site?
  3. How does Google really determine the publication date of an article?
  4. Are orphan pages really invisible to Google?
  5. Are Core Web Vitals really going to change your SEO ranking?
  6. Why do your local performance tests never match Search Console data?
  7. Should you really use rel="sponsored" instead of nofollow for your affiliate links?
  8. Can one website really dominate the entire first page of Google?
  9. Should you really optimize your pages for the terms 'best' and 'top'?
  10. Why does Google take 3 to 6 months to crawl your complete redesign?
  11. Does article length really impact Google rankings?
  12. Do you really need to match keywords word for word in your SEO content?
  13. Is Google indexing really instantaneous, or are there hidden delays?
  14. Do you really need to choose between a 301 redirect and a canonical tag to merge two sites?
  15. Does Top Stories really use a different algorithm than conventional search?
  16. Why doesn't the Google News tab always display your articles in chronological order?
  17. Can orphan pages really harm your site's SEO performance?
  18. Is there really a difference between rel=nofollow and rel=sponsored for affiliate links?
  19. Does Google really restrict how many times a domain can appear in search results?
  20. Should you really stop using exact match keywords in your content?
  21. Why is content specificity more important than keyword stuffing?
  22. Does the length of an article really influence its ranking on Google?
  23. Why does it take Google 3 to 6 months to refresh an entire large site?
  24. Should you stop manually submitting URLs to Google?
  25. Do you really need to include 'best' and 'top' in your content to rank for these queries?
  26. Should you really choose between 301 redirect and canonical for merging two sites?
  27. Can your site really appear in Top Stories and the News tab without being a news outlet?
  28. Should you really align visible dates and structured data for chronological ranking?
  29. Do orphan pages really harm your SEO?
  30. Have Core Web Vitals really become a crucial ranking factor?
  31. Should you really prioritize rel=sponsored for affiliate links, or is nofollow enough?
  32. Do you really need to mark your affiliate links to avoid a Google penalty?
  33. Can the same site really appear 7 times on the same SERP?
  34. Should you really optimize your pages for 'best', 'top', or 'near me'?
  35. Why does it take Google 3 to 6 months to refresh large websites?
  36. Does the length of an article really influence its Google ranking?
  37. Is it really necessary to match exact keywords in your SEO content?
  38. Does Google really impose an indexing delay based on the quality of your pages?
  39. Why does Google still show the old domain in site: queries after a 301 redirect?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google announces that Core Web Vitals will become an official ranking signal starting next May, integrated into the Page Experience. A CLS greater than 0.25 may penalize your positioning. In practical terms, measurable user experience becomes an explicit criterion, changing the game for all sites where technical performance has been neglected until now.

What you need to understand

What Specific Changes Are We Seeing with This Announcement?

Until now, Core Web Vitals were merely a set of recommendations published by Google in May 2020, having no direct impact on ranking. Mueller's announcement signifies a shift: these metrics are becoming an official ranking factor, incorporated into what Google calls Page Experience.

The Page Experience includes several existing signals — mobile-friendly, HTTPS, absence of intrusive popups — to which the three Core Web Vitals are now added: LCP (Largest Contentful Paint), FID (First Input Delay), and CLS (Cumulative Layout Shift). CLS, which measures visual stability, becomes particularly critical: a score above 0.25 may directly affect positioning.

Why Is Google Making Such a Big Deal About CLS?

CLS is probably the most visible metric for users. A button that moves at the moment of clicking, text shifting during reading — it's frustrating and measurable. Google has real data from billions of sessions through Chrome, and CLS often correlates with a high bounce rate.

Unlike LCP or FID, which depend on server or network performance, CLS is often related to avoidable development errors: images without dimensions, poorly loaded fonts, dynamically injected content. Therefore, Google emphasizes this lever because it is both critical for UX and under the direct control of webmasters.

Are All Sites Affected in the Same Way?

No, and that's where it gets interesting. Google has always reiterated that content remains the dominant factor. Page Experience mainly acts as a tiebreaker between two pages of similar quality. If your site has overwhelming authority and unique content, an average CLS won’t make you plummet.

However, in competitive queries where 10 sites fight for the top 3 spots with comparable content, Core Web Vitals can make a difference. E-commerce, media, and news sites — where competition is fierce and positioning margins are slim — must take this announcement very seriously.

  • Core Web Vitals will become a ranking signal officially next May, integrated into Page Experience
  • A CLS greater than 0.25 is explicitly mentioned as a critical threshold that could negatively affect ranking
  • CLS measures visual stability — unexpected shifts of elements during loading — and is often linked to fixable development errors
  • The impact will be more pronounced in competitive queries where multiple quality comparable sites compete for the top positions
  • Content remains the dominant factor: Page Experience predominantly plays a tiebreaker role, not a total ranking revolution

SEO Expert opinion

Is This Statement Consistent with What We Observe on the Ground?

Yes and no. Since 2020, we've seen Google actively testing Core Web Vitals in its algorithms, but the impact remains difficult to isolate. Some sites with catastrophic CWV continue to rank in the top 3 on ultra-competitive queries simply because they have overwhelming domain authority and irreplaceable content.

What Mueller confirms here is that the integration is becoming official and widespread. But be careful: “ranking factor” does not mean “absolute priority.” Google uses hundreds of signals, and the relative weight of each varies depending on the request context, competition, and content typology. [To verify]: the exact weight of Core Web Vitals in the overall algorithm remains opaque — Google never communicates percentages.

Is the 0.25 Threshold for CLS an Absolute Red Line?

Mueller speaks of a CLS “greater than 0.25” as a negative threshold. This is consistent with Google's official documentation, which categorizes CLS scores into three zones: good (< 0.1), needs improvement (0.1 - 0.25), and poor (> 0.25). But be cautious not to turn this into a binary dogma.

In reality, Google rarely operates on an all-or-nothing basis. A site at 0.26 won't collapse overnight, especially if it excels in other areas. However, a competitor at 0.08 with equivalent content could gradually surpass you. The real risk is cumulative: poor CLS + slow LCP + high FID + average content = yes, you are vulnerable.

What Are the Grey Areas of This Announcement?

Mueller does not clarify how Google handles variations between mobile and desktop. Core Web Vitals are measured separately on both platforms, and discrepancies can be huge. A site might be impeccable on desktop and catastrophic on mobile — or vice versa. Google indexes mobile-first, so logically, it is the mobile metrics that count, but this is never explicitly stated here.

Another ambiguity: the granularity of the penalty. Does Google apply a penalty at the domain level, or page by page? If a strategic landing page has a perfect CLS but 80% of the site is average, does it penalize the performing page? [To verify] — field data suggests an evaluation by URL, but Google remains vague on this point.

Attention: Do not underestimate the latency between correction and effect. Even if you fix your CLS today, Google uses ground data (CrUX) collected over a rolling 28-day period. Improvement will not be visible in rankings for several weeks, or even months if your traffic is low and Google lacks reliable data on your site.

Practical impact and recommendations

How to Quickly Audit Your Site's CLS?

Your first reflex: Google Search Console, Core Web Vitals section. It’s the official source, based on real user data (CrUX). Look at the mobile report first, identify the URLs in the red zone (CLS > 0.25) and the common patterns — often, it's a specific template causing issues.

Complement with Lighthouse (integrated in Chrome DevTools) and PageSpeed Insights for lab tests. Be cautious: these tools simulate, and may not always reflect real behavior. A CLS of 0.01 in the lab could explode to 0.40 in production if your ads or A/B testing inject dynamic content. Always cross-check the data.

What Are the Main Causes of a High CLS and How to Fix Them?

Images without dimensions: this is the number one cause. If you do not specify width and height in HTML or CSS, the browser does not reserve space, and the image shifts everything during loading. Solution: always add size attributes, or use aspect-ratio in CSS for responsive layouts.

Fonts loading asynchronously: FOIT (Flash of Invisible Text) or FOUT (Flash of Unstyled Text) causes shifts when the font loads. Use font-display: swap cautiously, or better yet, preload critical fonts with <link rel="preload"> and optimize with font-display: optional to avoid any shifts.

Dynamically injected content: ads, cookie banners, push notifications — anything that adds itself after the first paint without reserved space. Always reserve space in CSS, even if the content is conditional. For ads, impose fixed sizes or use placeholders.

What Mistakes to Avoid When Correcting CLS?

Do not sacrifice UX for a perfect score. Some sites add absurd min-height everywhere, creating unsightly empty spaces just to stabilize the layout. The goal is balance: a CLS under 0.1 without degrading visual experience.

Another trap: fixing CLS in the lab but ignoring third-party scripts. Your code is clean, but a poorly configured tracking pixel or chat widget can blow everything up in production. Audit all third-party scripts, impose strict rules on your partners, or isolate them in iframes to limit the impact.

  • Audit your site via Google Search Console > Core Web Vitals (real mobile data prioritized)
  • Always add width/height attributes on all images and media
  • Preload critical fonts and use font-display thoughtfully (swap or optional depending on context)
  • Reserve space for dynamically loaded content (ads, cookie banners, notifications) with CSS placeholders
  • Test under real conditions (network throttling, various devices) — do not rely solely on lab tests
  • Monitor third-party scripts — a single misconfigured tag can ruin all your efforts
Optimizing Core Web Vitals, particularly CLS, requires a rigorous technical approach: cross audits, fixes at the front-end code level, strict management of third-party resources, and continuous monitoring. If your internal team lacks resources or expertise in these areas — front-end development, performance optimization, CrUX data analysis — it may be worthwhile to be supported by an SEO agency that specializes in these technical optimizations end-to-end and can act quickly before the May deadline.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site peut-il bien ranker avec un CLS supérieur à 0.25 ?
Oui, si le contenu et l'autorité compensent. Les Core Web Vitals sont un facteur parmi des centaines. Sur des requêtes peu concurrentielles ou avec un contenu unique, un CLS médiocre ne vous fera pas disparaître. Mais sur des SERPs compétitives, c'est un désavantage clair.
Le CLS est-il mesuré uniquement sur mobile ou aussi sur desktop ?
Les deux, mais Google indexe en mobile-first. Logiquement, les métriques mobiles pèsent plus lourd. Un site parfait sur desktop mais catastrophique sur mobile risque d'être pénalisé, l'inverse est moins critique.
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une correction du CLS impacte le ranking ?
Google utilise les données CrUX collectées sur 28 jours glissants. Même après correction, comptez plusieurs semaines avant que l'amélioration soit visible dans les classements, surtout si votre trafic est faible.
Les scripts tiers (pubs, analytics) peuvent-ils ruiner mon CLS même si mon code est propre ?
Absolument. Un pixel de tracking ou une pub mal configurée peut injecter du contenu sans réserver l'espace, faisant exploser le CLS en production. Auditez et contrôlez tous les scripts tiers, ou isolez-les dans des iframes.
Faut-il viser un CLS de 0 ou un score sous 0.1 suffit-il ?
Un CLS sous 0.1 est classé « bon » par Google, c'est largement suffisant. Viser 0 peut vous pousser à dégrader l'UX avec des espaces réservés excessifs. L'équilibre prime sur la perfection absolue.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Web Performance

🎥 From the same video 39

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 13/11/2020

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.