Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
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- 4:56 Is it true that Googlebot crawls from the USA: how can you avoid the geo-IP cloaking trap?
- 8:42 Can you really block Googlebot state by state in the U.S. without breaking everything?
- 11:31 Why does Google not index all your pages despite active crawling?
- 12:17 Are Reddit's nofollow links really useless for SEO?
- 14:14 Should you always enable loading='lazy' on all your images to boost SEO?
- 15:25 Should you really reduce the number of language versions for hreflang?
- 18:27 Should you really fix every 404 error reported in Search Console?
- 20:47 Are jump links really useless for Google's crawling?
- 21:55 Should you disavow ghost backlinks that are only visible in Search Console?
- 29:18 Should you really contextualize the alt attribute beyond a visual description?
- 32:47 Should you really worry about 301 redirects and multiple 404 pages?
- 33:02 Is Google algorithmically downgrading specific sectors during health crises?
- 34:06 Should you really use different domain names for a multilingual site?
- 36:28 Should you really make all recipe images indexable to perform well in SEO?
- 37:49 Should you encode non-ASCII characters in XML sitemap URLs?
- 38:15 Does Hreflang Really Ensure Accurate Geographic Targeting for Your International Traffic?
- 41:05 Why does Google only index one version when your country pages are nearly identical?
- 45:51 Should you develop unique content to effectively index various versions of the same service?
- 46:27 Should you create a new page or update the existing one for a temporary change?
- 49:01 Is it really necessary to avoid using multiple title and meta description tags on a single page?
- 52:13 Are 500/503 errors lasting a few hours really invisible to your indexing?
Google confirms that disavowed links remain visible in the link report of Search Console even if they are ignored by the ranking algorithm. This distinction between display and algorithmic processing can create confusion during a backlink audit. An SEO practitioner must therefore analyze their link profile independently of the Disavow file to assess the true health of their link building.
What you need to understand
What is the difference between display and algorithmic processing?
Google operates two distinct processes in managing backlinks. On one side, the ranking algorithm determines which links pass on value — or spam. On the other, the Search Console interface displays all detected links pointing to your site.
The Disavow file only intervenes in the first process. When you disavow a link, you are asking Google to ignore it in its ranking calculations. But that link remains tracked, crawled, and displayed in the link report. It's like putting a filter on raw data: the data still exists, you just see it differently.
Why does Google maintain this separation?
The logic is quite simple. Search Console is a diagnostic tool, not a cleansed dashboard. If Google hid disavowed links, you would lose visibility on the complete history of your link profile. It would then be impossible to verify if a toxic link has truly been crawled, or if a competitor continues to link to you with spammy anchors.
This transparency also allows you to detect patterns. If you see 300 links from a network of dubious sites, you know there is a problem — even if you have disavowed them. Hiding this data would create a false impression of cleanliness which would harm your analytical ability.
How should you interpret the link report after a Disavow?
The link report then becomes a double inventory. It shows what Google sees (all detected links) and not what Google values (the links after Disavow filtering). This nuance is crucial during an audit: you cannot judge the quality of your profile solely on what you see in the console.
Concretely, you need to cross-reference several sources: Search Console for completeness, your Disavow file to know what is neutralized, and third-party tools like Ahrefs or Majestic to independently assess the toxicity score. The link report alone is never sufficient to diagnose a penalty or a link building problem.
- The link report displays all detected backlinks, whether they are disavowed or not
- The Disavow file asks Google to ignore certain links in its ranking calculations only
- It is impossible to judge the health of a profile based solely on the Search Console display
- A disavowed link remains tracked and crawled, it does not disappear from Google's index
- This separation preserves the transparency necessary for a complete diagnosis of link building
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. For years, SEOs have noticed that the link report does not change after uploading a Disavow file. Some were concerned to see persistent toxic links after disavowal, thinking that the tool was not functioning. This clarification from Mueller settles that confusion.
That said, Google has never been transparent about the processing time for the Disavow file. We know that links remain displayed, but we are unsure how long it takes for the algorithm to actually ignore them in the ranking. Empirical tests suggest several weeks to several months — but no official confirmation. [To be verified]
What nuances should be added to this standpoint?
Google simplifies deliberately. The reality is that some disavowed links can continue to impact your site if the algorithm takes time to recrawl them. A toxic link disavowed in January may still weigh in the PageRank calculation in March if Googlebot hasn't revisited it.
Another point: the Disavow does not protect against manual actions. If a human reviewer examines your link profile via Search Console, they see all links — including those you have disavowed. Some SEOs think that a preventive Disavow protects them from a manual penalty. False. The webspam team can still impose sanctions if they believe you have blatantly manipulated your link building.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
There are not really any exceptions to the rule stated by Mueller. But be careful: some third-party tools (Ahrefs, SEMrush, Majestic) may detect or not detect disavowed links depending on their own crawl. If a link has been removed at source AND disavowed, it will eventually disappear from Google's link report — but because of the removal, not the Disavow.
Lastly, often overlooked: the Disavow file works at the level of the entire domain or a specific URL. If you disavow example.com, all links from that domain are ignored. But if you disavow example.com/page1 and a new link appears at example.com/page2, the latter will not be automatically neutralized. You will need to update your file.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do after this statement?
Firstly, stop worrying if your disavowed links still appear in Search Console. It's normal and expected. Instead, focus on active monitoring of your link profile via third-party tools that calculate a toxicity score independently of Google.
Next, document each wave of disavowal. Create a tracking file with the upload date of the Disavow, the domains or URLs concerned, and the reason for the disavowal. This will allow you to cross-reference with your traffic curves and see if the algorithm has indeed neutralized those links — or if other factors explain your fluctuations.
What errors should you avoid during a backlink audit?
Never rely solely on the link report from Search Console to evaluate the true quality of your link building. This report is comprehensive, not qualitative. It mixes premium links from authoritative sites and spam from Russian forums.
Secondly, avoid mass disavowal out of panic. Some SEOs panic upon seeing hundreds of dubious links and upload a giant Disavow file. The result: they also neutralize marginal but legitimate links that provided a small touch of diversity. Be selective. Only disavow the proven spam or links from clearly artificial networks.
How to check if your disavow strategy is effective?
Monitor your rankings on strategic queries before and after the disavowal. If you observe a gradual improvement over 2-3 months, that's a good sign. If nothing changes, either the links were not so toxic, or the algorithm had already not taken them into account.
Also use Google Search Console to check if any manual actions have been lifted after a disavowal. If you had a penalty for artificial links, a well-documented Disavow may convince the webspam team to lift the sanction — but only if you submit a reasoned reconsideration request.
- Regularly download the link report from Search Console to track changes
- Cross-reference with third-party tools (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush) to evaluate toxicity
- Document each Disavow file with date, concerned domains, and justifications
- Only disavow links that are clearly spammy or result from a negative SEO attack
- Monitor traffic and ranking fluctuations after each Disavow upload
- Submit a reconsideration request if a manual action is active on your site
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Si je désavoue un lien, disparaît-il du rapport de liens dans Search Console ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google prenne en compte un fichier Disavow ?
Le fichier Disavow protège-t-il contre les actions manuelles de Google ?
Dois-je désavouer tous les liens que je considère de faible qualité ?
Comment savoir si mon fichier Disavow fonctionne réellement ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 15/05/2020
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