Official statement
Other statements from this video 20 ▾
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- 2:06 Does the language of backlinks really influence SEO?
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- 9:16 Should we really be worried about nofollow links in spam examples?
- 13:10 Could linking to AMP cache URLs jeopardize your SEO?
- 15:16 Can DMCA complaints really hurt your site’s rankings in the SERPs?
- 16:16 Do you really need to duplicate breadcrumbs on the mobile version to stay indexed?
- 18:01 Why does an URL overhaul take longer to index than a domain change?
- 19:15 Is site speed really a negligible ranking factor in Google?
- 24:07 Why does Google index non-canonical pages even when the rel=canonical markup is correct?
- 28:31 Is it true that Googlebot still serves old versions of your pages?
- 30:43 Do JavaScript redirects really pass PageRank?
- 33:09 Why are your pages struggling in the SERPs even when targeting the same query?
- 34:17 Are structured data becoming an unmanageable headache for SEOs?
- 36:58 Should you really focus all your content on the homepage for single-product websites?
- 38:01 Can poorly implemented structured data really mislead Google?
- 41:13 Do URLs blocked by robots.txt really consume your crawl budget?
- 42:15 Can featured snippets come from URLs outside of position #1?
- 44:37 Do URLs with recent dates really boost your SEO?
Google assesses ranking based on the current status of links and content at the moment it analyzes a page. Modifying a nofollow attribute or adjusting your internal linking has no effect until the page is recrawled. In practical terms, your SEO optimizations remain invisible until Googlebot's next visit — and this is a problem if your crawl budget is limited or your crawl frequency is low.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by the "current status" of a page?
When Google refers to current status, it means the version of your page as it exists at the precise moment when Googlebot crawls and indexes it. Not the one you just edited five minutes ago, nor the one you're preparing for tomorrow. It's the version that the bot sees right now.
This means that any change — the removal of a nofollow, adding an internal link, or restructuring the link network — remains pending until Google comes back to check. Your modified page exists in production, but for the engine, it doesn't exist yet. The index reflects the old version, and that's the one that continues to weigh in the ranking.
Why does this logic pose practical problems?
Because the crawl frequency varies significantly from site to site. A news media outlet will be recrawled multiple times a day. A less active corporate site, once a month — or even less. In the meantime, your SEO optimizations have no effect.
Worse yet: if you make massive changes to your internal linking or link attributes, you create a window of inconsistency where some pages have been recrawled and others have not. Google thus sees a hybrid state of your site, with conflicting signals. The result: unpredictable ranking fluctuations for several weeks.
How does Google decide when to recrawl a page?
Google allocates a crawl budget to each site based on its popularity, editorial freshness, and technical health. The more alive and responsive your site is, the more often Googlebot visits. But this budget is not infinite, and it is divided among all your URLs.
If you have 10,000 pages and a crawl budget of 500 URLs per day, it will take 20 days to recrawl everything — assuming no new pages are published in the meantime. In plain terms, your site is never fully up to date in the index. And Mueller confirms that Google doesn't work magic: it works with what it sees, not what you intended to do.
- The index reflects the state of the page at the last crawl, not in real-time.
- Modifying a nofollow attribute or an internal link has an effect only after the page has been recrawled.
- The crawl frequency depends on the crawl budget allocated to your site, which varies by industry and your editorial pace.
- A less active site might wait several weeks for a change to be taken into account.
- Massive changes create temporary inconsistencies in the index if not all pages are recrawled simultaneously.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it's one of the few times Google clearly states what SEOs have observed for years. We all know that a link added today doesn't boost ranking tomorrow. But Mueller here specifies a crucial detail: it's the recrawl that triggers the acknowledgment, not any real-time detection system.
This also confirms why forcing a recrawl via Search Console after a critical change is a good practice. Without that, you passively wait for Googlebot to come back — and it has no reason to do so if your page hasn't changed in its last snapshot. [To be verified]: Google claims not to treat manually submitted URLs differently, but in practice, we see an almost systematic effect on strategic pages.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller speaks only of links and content. He says nothing about external signals — backlinks, CTR, user signals — that can evolve without a recrawl. A backlink added on a third-party site will likely be taken into account faster than your internal change because Google crawls the source URL before yours.
Another point: "current status" does not mean "perfect status." Google indexes what it sees, including temporary errors. If Googlebot crawls your page during a server outage or a production update, it will index a 500 error or a broken version. And again, you'll have to wait for the next visit to correct it.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Google makes exceptions for certain critical signals. Core Web Vitals, for instance, are measured via field data (CrUX), not during the crawl. You can improve your LCP without needing a recrawl — metrics update with a 28-day delay, regardless of Googlebot.
Similarly, rich results and structured data can sometimes be processed without a full recrawl, especially if Google detects a minor change in the markup. But it's opaque, and there's no guarantee it works systematically. Counting on that would be a strategic mistake.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely after a change in links?
First, force a recrawl via Search Console for strategic pages. Use the "URL Inspection" tool, then "Request Indexing." Yes, Google says it doesn't change anything, but in practice, we see an effect within 24-48 hours on critical pages. Don't submit 500 URLs at once — prioritize.
Next, monitor your server logs. If Googlebot doesn't come back within a week following a major change, that's a weak signal: your crawl budget may be saturated, or the page is deemed non-priority. In this case, increase the update frequency (add fresh content, link from hot pages), or check that it's not blocked by a misconfigured robots.txt or canonical.
What mistakes should be avoided during an internal linking overhaul?
Do not modify everything at once. If you restructure the linking of 5,000 pages in one night, Google will take weeks to recrawl everything. In the meantime, you have a hybrid site in the index: some pages point to URLs that no longer exist in the new linking, while others have the new links. The result: internal PageRank inconsistency, temporary ranking drops, and it's hard to tell if it's a bug or a normal effect.
Another pitfall: mass removal of nofollow attributes without checking where those links point. If you open up PageRank to zombie pages or thin content, you dilute your juice towards URLs that don't deserve it. Conduct an audit beforehand, not afterward. And if you change global navigation links (header, footer), expect a domino effect across the site — but spread out over time.
How can you verify that your changes have been acknowledged?
Use the "URL Inspection" tool in Search Console to view the indexed version of the page. Compare it with your production version. If Google still shows the old version 15 days after your change, it means it hasn't come back — or it crawled but didn't reindex (this can happen if the page is deemed duplicate or low-quality).
Another method: monitor your positions on specific queries where the internal linking plays a role. If you've strengthened a link to a target page and its position doesn't budge after 3 weeks, either Google hasn't recrawled, or the signal was too weak to make any difference. In this case, you need to rethink the strategy, not wait for a miracle.
- Force a recrawl via Search Console for strategic pages after any link changes.
- Monitor server logs to check that Googlebot indeed returns after your changes.
- Never overhaul the linking of thousands of pages at once — stagger it to avoid inconsistencies in the index.
- Audit the target URLs before removing nofollow attributes to avoid diluting PageRank to weak content.
- Use URL Inspection to compare the indexed version to the production version and detect update delays.
- Anticipate a delay of several weeks before complete impact on ranking after a massive link change.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google prenne en compte un lien interne modifié ?
Retirer un attribut nofollow booste-t-il immédiatement le ranking de la page cible ?
Faut-il demander une réindexation après chaque modification de lien interne ?
Google peut-il indexer une version incomplète de ma page si je la modifie pendant le crawl ?
Les backlinks externes sont-ils pris en compte plus vite que les liens internes modifiés ?
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