Official statement
Other statements from this video 45 ▾
- 1:01 Does every change to content or design really affect SEO rankings?
- 1:01 What impact can changing your site's design or content have on your rankings?
- 2:37 Do domain extensions (.com, .fr, .uk) really influence the value of backlinks?
- 4:06 Does redirecting your old pages to an archive really help preserve SEO?
- 4:13 Can redirecting to an archive section really help preserve the SEO of old pages?
- 5:16 Does blocking a folder via robots.txt kill the PageRank transfer to your strategic pages?
- 5:50 Should you block pages receiving backlinks with robots.txt?
- 6:27 Do links from old press releases really hold any SEO value?
- 6:54 Do links from old press releases really drag down your backlink profile?
- 7:59 How does Google truly detect duplicate content and why doesn't it seek the original?
- 8:29 Does boilerplate content really harm SEO?
- 9:29 Does Google really not care who published the original content?
- 10:03 Does content originality really ensure top rankings on Google?
- 13:42 Do domain migration problems amplify the impact of Core Updates?
- 13:46 Are site migrations really as risky as they seem?
- 20:28 How long does it really take for a domain migration to stabilize in Google?
- 22:06 Are domain migrations really risk-free according to Google?
- 26:14 Should you really delay your SEO changes during a Core Update?
- 27:27 Should you really update all backlinks after a domain migration?
- 29:00 Should you really check a domain's history before purchasing it for an SEO migration?
- 31:01 Why does Google maintain SafeSearch filtering even after migrating to clean content?
- 32:03 Do you really need the address change tool to migrate between subdomains?
- 32:03 Should you really use the address change tool when migrating between subdomains?
- 33:10 Are Web Stories really indexable like regular pages?
- 33:10 Can Web Stories really rank like traditional pages?
- 36:04 Do AMP errors really harm Google rankings, or is it just a myth?
- 36:24 Do AMP errors really affect your Google ranking?
- 37:49 How does cleaning up your URL structure really enhance the ranking of your strategic pages?
- 38:00 How can cleaning up your URL structure solve your ranking problems?
- 39:36 Is it true that hidden text for accessibility is penalized by Google?
- 39:36 Does hidden text for accessibility really harm your site's SEO?
- 41:10 Why do your impressions skyrocket on certain days in Search Console?
- 42:45 How can you implement paywall schema when conducting A/B tests with multiple variations?
- 44:03 Should you really show the complete content to Googlebot if the paywall blocks users?
- 48:00 Does Google really rewrite your titles to boost clicks without affecting rankings?
- 48:07 Does Google rewrite your titles to manipulate your click-through rates?
- 49:49 Should you really stuff your titles with every keyword variation?
- 50:50 Is it true that Google rewrites your title tags, and how can you ensure your original version gets displayed?
- 51:56 Does a modified HTML title lose its ranking power in the SERPs?
- 65:39 Should you really stop optimizing for synonymous keywords?
- 65:39 Should you stop optimizing for synonyms and geographical variations?
- 67:16 Why does Google consistently block rich results for adult sites?
- 67:16 Can adult sites actually display rich results on Google?
- 68:48 Does SafeSearch really filter the entire domain if only a part contains adult content?
- 69:08 Can an adult domain host non-adult sections without penalizing the entire site?
Google claims it does not weigh backlinks differently based on domain extension (.com, .fr, .au). Instead, the engine evaluates the context and relevance of the link: some provide a lot of information about the target page, while others are purely anecdotal. In practice, a backlink from a .fr is worth as much as a .com if the context and quality are equivalent.
What you need to understand
Why this clarification on domain extensions?
For years, some SEO practitioners have believed that geographic domain extensions (.fr, .uk, .de) benefit from a local relevance bonus, while .coms would be more 'universal' but less targeted. This belief is based on the observation that Google sometimes favors local results in geolocated SERPs.
Mueller dispels this idea: the extension itself is not a weighting factor of the link. What matters is the contextual signal that the link conveys — its position in the content, the anchor, the theme of the source page, and the semantic coherence between the source and target.
What does 'provided context' mean in link evaluation?
Google analyzes the immediate textual environment of the link: the paragraph in which it appears, the surrounding words, the subject tackled by the source page. A link placed in a 'Partners' block in the footer provides little information about the targeted page. An editorial link at the heart of a 2000-word article, preceded and followed by rich semantic context, transmits much more signal.
This is what Mueller calls importance according to context: two identical links (same anchor, same target domain) will not have the same weight if one is buried in a sidebar and the other is naturally integrated into quality editorial content.
What links does Google consider 'anecdotal'?
Anecdotal links are those that do not contribute to understanding the subject being discussed. Typical examples include mentions in RSS feed aggregators, automatic links generated by CMS, citations in generic directories without thematic relevance, and systematic reciprocal links without added value.
In contrast, a 'information-rich' link is one that helps Google understand the subject, niche, authority of the targeted page. If a page on mobile optimization points to a technical article on Core Web Vitals, the context reinforces the thematic relevance and Google draws conclusions about the target content.
- The domain extension (.com, .fr, .uk) does not directly influence the weight of a backlink
- The editorial context of the link (textual environment, position, anchor) determines its informative value
- Anecdotal links (footer, sidebar, aggregators) convey little or no relevance signal
- Editorial links at the heart of rich thematic content provide the most information to Google
- Thematic coherence between source page and target page amplifies the signal of the link
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Yes and no. A/B tests and backlink audits indeed show that the extension alone does not trigger a mechanical boost. A .edu or .gov does not guarantee better ranking if the link is placed in a weak context (directory, partners list). However, these extensions are often correlated with quality institutional sites, hence the confusion.
What’s ambiguous is that Mueller remains vague on the exact weight of 'context'. We know that Google analyzes the textual environment, but what precise signals? Semantic proximity measured by what embeddings? The link's position in the DOM or in the flow of reading? [To be verified] - Google has never communicated a numerical metric on this point.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
First nuance: geolocation vs. extension. Google can favor a .fr in the results of france.google.com not due to the extension, but because the server is hosted in France, the content is in French, and location signals (Google Business Profile, local citations) converge. The extension is just a proxy among others.
Second nuance: the domain's history. An old .com with a clean link profile for 15 years has accumulated trust. A .xyz launched 6 months ago with a suspicious PBN link profile will be scrutinized differently. It’s not the extension that plays, but the temporal and behavioral footprint of the domain.
In what cases does this rule not apply or become misleading?
Beware of exact match domains (EMD) on exotic extensions (.xyz, .top, .site). Even if Google claims not to differentiate, these extensions have historically been used more for spam. A link from a .top with a keyword-stuffed domain name will be suspected of belonging to a PBN, regardless of 'context' — simply because the pattern is spammy.
Another edge case: redirected ccTLDs (.co to .com, .ly as a shortener). Google can lose the context if the redirect breaks thematic coherence. A .ly pointing to a French page on a B2B subject will be less 'readable' for the algorithm than a classic .fr.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely to optimize the backlink profile?
Stop chasing .edu or .gov for their extension. Focus on the contextual quality of the link: does the link appear in a rich editorial paragraph? Is the anchor natural and descriptive? Does the source page deal with a subject consistent with your target content?
Favor deep editorial placements (guest posts on thematic media, mentions in in-depth articles) rather than generic links (footer, sidebar, catch-all 'Resources' pages). If you buy links — which remains risky — require a dense semantic context around the link, not just a mechanical insertion.
What mistakes should be avoided in building a link profile?
Do not over-optimize anchors thinking to compensate for a weak context. A link with the exact anchor 'SEO agency Paris' in a .com footer is worth less than a brand anchor link in a detailed article on a niche .fr. Context takes precedence over the anchor, contrary to what many still believe.
Avoid systematic link exchanges between sites of different extensions thinking to 'diversify' the profile. Google detects these cross patterns. Useful diversity is thematic and contextual, not mechanical ('10 .com links, 10 .fr links, 10 .uk links').
How to audit the contextual weight of your existing backlinks?
Review your backlinks in Search Console or Ahrefs. For each link, ask yourself: does this link provide information about my content? If the answer is 'no' (footer link, generic directory, automatic widget), this link is probably ‘anecdotal’ in Mueller's sense.
Disavow suspicious anecdotal links (spam domains, over-optimized anchors out of context). Keep or strengthen rich editorial links, even if they come from domains with 'exotic' extensions — as long as the context is solid and the theme is aligned.
- Audit the editorial context of each major backlink (position in the page, textual environment)
- Prefer placements in the body of long content (500+ words) rather than footer/sidebar
- Check the thematic coherence between source page and target page
- Disavow anecdotal links from suspicious domains or non-editorial positions
- Do not overemphasize .edu/.gov extensions if the context is weak
- Diversify thematic sources, not mechanically domain extensions
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un backlink depuis un .edu ou .gov a-t-il plus de poids qu'un .com ?
Dois-je privilégier les liens depuis des domaines avec l'extension de mon pays (.fr pour la France) ?
Qu'est-ce qu'un lien « anecdotique » au sens de Google ?
Comment maximiser le « contexte » d'un backlink pour Google ?
Faut-il désavouer les backlinks provenant d'extensions exotiques (.xyz, .top) ?
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