Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 1:36 Why does Google show both the mobile and desktop versions of your pages in its results?
- 2:38 Is the disavow file really the solution to clean up a toxic link profile?
- 3:13 Should you still use the disavow file for SEO?
- 3:49 Is Google really managing your bad backlinks all on its own?
- 7:18 Are links in forums really risk-free for your SEO?
- 10:17 Why does Google take up to a year to assess your quality changes?
- 12:01 Does loading speed really only impact SEO if your site is extremely slow?
- 12:41 Is loading speed really just a minor ranking factor?
- 16:27 Why might your SEO efforts take a year to affect your organic traffic?
- 18:59 Are automatic translations penalized by Google?
- 18:59 Can Google Translate really be used to create indexable multilingual content?
- 19:33 Should you really give up forums to build backlinks?
- 27:56 Does the Google sandbox really exist for new websites?
- 30:13 Do H1-H6 tags really influence Google rankings?
- 37:54 Is it a problem when JavaScript filters URLs?
- 40:47 Should you really convert your entire site to AMP to rank on mobile?
- 43:13 Should you really redirect ALL URLs during a site migration?
- 44:00 Is it really necessary to duplicate your JSON-LD markup across all your pages?
- 46:16 Should you let go of keyword-rich domain names in favor of your brand?
- 47:30 Should you really wait until launch day to redirect an old domain to a new one?
- 51:27 Are Single-Information Contents Doomed to Disappear from SERPs?
- 51:35 Is Short Content Killing Your Site’s Organic Traffic?
Google claims to currently treat mobile and desktop versions similarly in terms of speed and crawling, but warns that this parity could disappear with the mobile-first index. For SEO practitioners, this means a difference in treatment is looming on the horizon. The challenge is to anticipate this transition by aligning the performance and content of your two versions now.
What you need to understand
What does Google really mean by this "similar treatment"?
When Mueller talks about similar treatment, he refers to two specific aspects: loading speed and crawling frequency. At this point, Googlebot does not systematically differentiate between your mobile and desktop site for these two criteria.
Specifically, if your desktop page loads in 2 seconds and your mobile version in 4, Google does not automatically penalize mobile slowness as long as both versions remain within acceptable standards. The crawl budget allocated to your domain does not structurally favor one version over the other either. This apparent neutrality masks a more complex reality.
Why is this statement made right before the mobile-first index?
The context is crucial. This declaration precedes the arrival of mobile-first indexing, a major paradigm shift where Google will prioritize indexing the mobile version of your pages.
Mueller provides a temporal marker here: as long as mobile-first is not activated for your site, both versions are treated equally. But he explicitly warns that this symmetry will shift. Once the switch occurs, your mobile version will become the reference for indexing, ranking, and SEO value attribution.
What practical implications are there for responsive versus adaptive sites?
Responsive sites (one URL for all versions) do not experience significant friction, as mobile and desktop share the same content and HTML structure. The "similar treatment" naturally translates into continuity.
In contrast, sites with distinct URLs for mobile and desktop (m.example.com vs www.example.com) or dynamic configurations need to anticipate. If the two versions diverge in content, internal link structure, or speed, the transition to mobile-first will create a sharp gap between what Google indexed and what it will index.
- Crawl budget: currently distributed without strict preference between mobile and desktop, shifts to the mobile version only post-mobile-first.
- Loading speed: Google's tolerance for a slow mobile will erode once that version becomes the reference for indexing.
- Missing content: any element present on desktop but absent on mobile is likely to disappear from the index during the switch.
- rel=alternate/canonical annotations: become critical for sites with separate URLs, as Google needs to identify the relationship between the versions.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
In principle, yes: before the widespread deployment of mobile-first, it is indeed observed that Google does not systematically penalize sites whose mobile version is slower or less complete than the desktop version. Rankings remain stable even with marked performance gaps.
But this consistency hides a nuance: Google is already testing mobile-first on some pilot sites at the time of this statement. Observations vary depending on whether your domain has already switched or not. [To verify]: the notion of "similar treatment" does not clarify whether Google measures Core Web Vitals the same way on both versions or whether it is already applying different thresholds behind the scenes.
What is Mueller not saying in this statement?
The blind spot is ranking. Mueller talks about crawling and speed, but does not explicitly mention ranking. However, even before the official mobile-first, Google has long favored mobile-friendly sites in mobile SERPs through signals like touch compatibility or the absence of Flash.
So yes, crawling is neutral, but ranking is no longer completely so. Practitioners who focus solely on crawl budget risk missing the essential: mobile user experience already weighs in the algorithm, even if indexing remains desktop-first.
Do we need to wait for mobile-first to take action?
No. This statement should not be read as a green light to delay your mobile projects. The current "similar treatment" is a temporary window of opportunity, not a permanent state.
Waiting for the switch exposes you to sharp drops in visibility if your mobile is lagging. Sites that anticipate the switch experience a smooth transition; those that don’t face difficult positions to recover. The pragmatic logic: align your two versions now, even if Google is not yet compelling you to do so.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize auditing on your two versions?
Start with a content inventory. Compare page by page what exists on desktop versus mobile. CMSs configured to hide entire sections on mobile (tables, accordions, widgets) create gaps that Google will index as definitive once mobile-first goes live.
Next, check the depth of crawl. If your mobile navigation oversimplifies the menu, certain pages end up 4-5 clicks from the home page instead of 2-3 on desktop. Google will crawl those deep pages less frequently, or even ignore them if your crawl budget is tight.
How can you measure performance gaps between mobile and desktop?
Use PageSpeed Insights to compare Core Web Vitals of both versions on the same URLs. A desktop LCP of 1.8s and a mobile LCP of 4.2s signals a structural problem (unoptimized images, blocking JS, slow server in simulated 3G).
But don’t rely solely on lab data. Analyze CrUX (Chrome User Experience Report) data in Search Console to see what real users experience. A marked gap between desktop and mobile in the field indicates that your mobile optimizations are insufficient or that you are serving different resources depending on the device.
What mistakes should be avoided when preparing for mobile-first?
The first mistake is believing that responsive alone is enough. A responsive site can very well load 3 MB of unoptimized images on mobile simply because CSS hides them via display:none. Google still loads these resources, impacting your loading time.
The second mistake is neglecting structured data annotations. If your desktop displays rich snippets (FAQ, products, recipes) thanks to JSON-LD absent in the mobile version, those enrichments will disappear from the SERPs post-switch. Ensure that the markup is identical on both versions.
- Compare text content, images, videos, and internal links between desktop and mobile.
- Check that all structured data (JSON-LD, microdata) is present on mobile.
- Test mobile crawling using the URL inspection tool in Search Console.
- Optimize mobile images (WebP, srcset, lazy loading) to reduce weight without sacrificing quality.
- Eliminate intrusive pop-ups and blocking interstitials that degrade mobile experience.
- Monitor mobile-specific CrUX metrics in Search Console and address "Needs Improvement" thresholds.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le mobile-first index change-t-il la manière dont Google crawle mon site desktop ?
Si mon site est 100% responsive, dois-je quand même m'inquiéter du mobile-first ?
Google prend-il en compte la vitesse mobile différemment de la vitesse desktop pour le classement ?
Que se passe-t-il si mon contenu mobile est moins complet que mon contenu desktop ?
Comment savoir si mon site a déjà basculé en mobile-first indexing ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 14/11/2017
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