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Official statement

The choice between a flat URL structure and a folder structure has no significant impact on SEO, as long as the organization allows Google to understand the uniqueness of URLs and avoid crawling infinite parameter combinations.
11:47
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h06 💬 EN 📅 05/12/2014 ✂ 20 statements
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Other statements from this video 19
  1. 3:08 Pourquoi la balise canonical ne fonctionne-t-elle pas instantanément ?
  2. 4:10 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il vos balises rel=canonical pourtant correctement implémentées ?
  3. 5:46 Faut-il vraiment optimiser vos titres pour l'affichage mobile ?
  4. 7:10 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les versions www et non-www de votre site ?
  5. 7:11 Comment Google consolide-t-il vraiment les signaux entre vos différentes versions de site ?
  6. 8:27 Comment Google raccourcit-il les titres sur mobile et que faire pour garder le contrôle ?
  7. 10:48 Un nom de domaine exact (EMD) suffit-il encore à bien ranker ?
  8. 12:02 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter de la structure de ses URLs pour le référencement ?
  9. 20:01 Comment Google Penguin détecte-t-il vraiment les liens malveillants sur votre site ?
  10. 20:08 Penguin peut-il vraiment distinguer les mauvais liens que vous recevez malgré vous ?
  11. 40:49 Les commentaires utilisateurs influencent-ils vraiment le classement d'une page ?
  12. 44:49 Comment un nouveau site peut-il vraiment percer dans un marché saturé ?
  13. 50:06 Le contenu masqué derrière des onglets ou accordéons est-il pénalisé par Google ?
  14. 50:07 Le contenu caché derrière des onglets est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
  15. 51:24 A quelle vitesse les algorithmes de Google se mettent-ils vraiment à jour ?
  16. 51:52 Comment fonctionnent réellement les cycles de rafraîchissement des algorithmes Google ?
  17. 54:16 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le ranking Google ?
  18. 58:36 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
  19. 99:29 Faut-il encore utiliser rel=alternate et rel=canonical pour un site mobile en sous-domaine m. ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

John Mueller states that the choice between flat URLs (example.com/page) and hierarchical URLs (example.com/category/sub-category/page) does not influence SEO. What matters is that Google can identify the uniqueness of each URL and avoid infinite parameter combinations. Practitioners can therefore prefer the structure that is most coherent with their technical architecture rather than overthinking URL conventions.

What you need to understand

What does a flat or hierarchical URL structure really mean?

A flat URL structure places all pages at the same hierarchical level: example.com/product-1, example.com/blog-article, example.com/service-2. No folders, no visible depth in the URL itself.

On the other hand, a hierarchical structure reflects the site's organization: example.com/shop/clothing/shirts/product-1. This approach often mimics the informational architecture and makes it easier for humans to understand the hierarchy.

Why does this question keep coming up in SEO discussions?

For years, the SEO community has debated the impact of depth levels on crawling and ranking. The idea: the closer a page is to the root, the more “juice” it receives through internal linking, the better its chances of ranking.

Mueller's statement puts an end to this myth by asserting that the syntactic structure of the URL (flat or hierarchical) does not influence SEO. What matters is Google's ability to distinguish each URL and avoid falling into infinite crawl loops.

What does Google mean by 'avoiding crawling infinite parameter combinations'?

Google fears poorly managed parameterized URLs: example.com/product?color=blue&size=M&sort=price&filter=promo. If the site automatically generates thousands of variants without a clear logic, the crawl budget explodes.

The issue is not about choosing between “/category/page” or “/page,” but ensuring that each URL corresponds to a unique and identifiable content. Parameters should be limited, canonicalized, or excluded via robots.txt or Search Console.

  • Flat or hierarchical structure: no direct impact on ranking according to Google
  • Uniqueness of URLs: each page must have a distinct and stable address
  • Management of parameters: avoid infinite combinations that saturate the crawl budget
  • Technical coherence: prioritize simplicity and maintainability
  • Informational architecture: internal linking remains the real lever, not the URL syntax

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes and no. On medium-sized sites, I have never observed that a flat URL penalizes ranking compared to a hierarchical URL. A/B tests on migration from one structure to another show marginal variations, often related to poorly managed redirects rather than the structure itself.

Conversely, on very large e-commerce sites (several hundred thousand pages), a hierarchical structure facilitates technical management: crawl control by section, segmentation in Search Console, performance analysis by category. It is not a ranking factor but a management tool [To be verified] in a limited crawl budget context.

What nuances should be added to Mueller's statement?

Mueller speaks about the syntactic structure of the URL, not the underlying informational architecture. A flat URL does not prevent you from structuring internal linking deeply. Conversely, a hierarchical URL does not guarantee good hierarchy if the internal linking is chaotic.

In practical terms: a site can have flat URLs (example.com/article-123) while organizing a pyramidal internal linking with solid thematic hubs. Internal PageRank flows through links, not through slashes in the URL.

When does this rule not apply?

If your CMS generates dynamic parameterized URLs (infinite pagination, combined filters, user sessions), Mueller's statement becomes invalid. Google cannot manage uniqueness if each click produces a new URL with random parameters.

Similarly, on multilingual or multi-regional sites, the folder structure (/fr/, /en/, /de/) or subdomains remains a strong technical convention for hreflang and geographic targeting. Here, the URL syntax holds significance for Google.

Warning: Do not confuse “absence of direct impact on ranking” with “complete uselessness”. A coherent URL structure facilitates maintenance, error diagnosis, and log analysis. It is a choice of architecture, not a pure ranking lever.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should be done concretely to optimize URLs?

Focus on uniqueness and stability of each URL. Avoid duplicates, chaining redirects, and poorly configured canonicals. A site with flat URLs but clean management outperforms a site with hierarchy that has unresolved duplicates.

If you are launching a new project, choose the structure that aligns with your editorial and technical logic. A blog can work with example.com/article-title. An e-commerce site with thousands of references will gain clarity with example.com/category/sub-category/product.

What mistakes should be avoided when managing URL structure?

Do not migrate from one structure to another without valid reason. Each URL migration carries a risk of traffic loss if 301 redirects are poorly planned. I have seen sites lose 20 to 30% of their organic visibility after a poorly managed redesign.

Avoid also unnecessary parameters: ?utm_source, ?sessionid, ?ref in internal URLs pollute the index and fragment PageRank. Clean tracking parameters via the URL parameter in Search Console.

How can I check if my site follows the best practices for URLs?

Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Identify duplicate URLs, redirect chains, canonicals pointing to 404s. Compare the number of URLs crawled by Google (Search Console > Crawl Stats) to the number of URLs that are actually indexable.

If the gap exceeds 30%, you have a crawl budget or structural issue. Parameterized URLs, infinite paginations, or poorly managed facets are often the cause.

  • Choose a URL structure that matches the site architecture (flat or hierarchical according to size and complexity)
  • Ensure the uniqueness of each URL: no duplicates, correct canonicals, clean 301 redirects
  • Limit URL parameters: exclude unnecessary variables via robots.txt or Search Console
  • Check the crawl budget: compare crawled URLs vs. indexable URLs, identify bottlenecks
  • Maintain URL stability over time: avoid cosmetic migrations without added value
  • Document the structure logic to facilitate maintenance and onboarding of teams
The flat or hierarchical URL structure does not directly impact ranking, but it influences technical maintainability and architectural clarity. Prioritize coherence and uniqueness. These optimizations, while conceptually simple, often require in-depth technical audits and mastery of crawl tools. If you manage a complex site or are considering a migration, the support of a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and ensure a smooth transition without traffic loss.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je migrer mes URL en dossiers vers une structure plate pour améliorer mon SEO ?
Non. Google affirme qu'il n'y a pas de différence de ranking entre les deux structures. Une migration représente un risque de perte de trafic si mal gérée. Ne changez que si vous avez une raison technique ou éditoriale solide.
Une URL courte rank-t-elle mieux qu'une URL longue avec plusieurs niveaux de dossiers ?
La longueur de l'URL n'est pas un facteur de ranking direct selon Google. Ce qui compte : la clarté, l'absence de paramètres inutiles et la cohérence. Une URL longue mais logique ne pénalise pas.
Les URL en dossiers aident-elles Google à mieux comprendre la thématique d'une page ?
Google utilise principalement le contenu, le maillage interne et les balises sémantiques pour comprendre la thématique. La structure d'URL peut donner un indice léger, mais ce n'est pas un signal déterminant.
Comment gérer les URL paramétrées sans impacter le crawl budget ?
Utilisez le paramètre d'URL dans Search Console pour indiquer à Google les paramètres à ignorer. Canonicalisez les variantes vers l'URL principale. Excluez les chemins problématiques via robots.txt si nécessaire.
Quelle est la profondeur d'URL maximale recommandée pour le SEO ?
Il n'y a pas de limite stricte, mais au-delà de 3-4 niveaux de profondeur, le crawl devient moins fréquent et le PageRank interne se dilue. Privilégiez un maillage interne solide pour compenser la profondeur.
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Domain Name Pagination & Structure

🎥 From the same video 19

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h06 · published on 05/12/2014

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