Official statement
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Google confirms that a perfect PageSpeed Insights score is not a ranking condition. The key is mobile compatibility and a fast, smooth user experience. For SEO, this means prioritizing actual Core Web Vitals rather than wasting time optimizing every millisecond for a theoretical score.
What you need to understand
Why does Google downplay the importance of the PageSpeed Insights score?
PageSpeed Insights remains a diagnostic tool, not an absolute judge. The displayed score combines lab data (Lighthouse) and field data (CrUX). Google notes that this score does not directly reflect ranking impact because the algorithm measures actual user experience, not a theoretical grade.
What matters for ranking are the Core Web Vitals measured in the field: LCP, INP, CLS. A site can score 85 on PageSpeed but provide an excellent user experience under real conditions. Conversely, a site at 98 can frustrate visitors with aggressive interstitials or confusing navigation.
What constitutes a high-quality user experience according to Google?
Google describes a fast, efficient, and mobile-friendly experience. Fast means critical elements load quickly (LCP under 2.5 seconds). Efficient means the site responds instantly to interactions (INP under 200 ms). Mobile-friendly means the content adapts without forced zoom or overly close clickable elements.
The important nuance is that efficiency takes precedence over technical perfection. An e-commerce site with a smooth checkout but some non-critical third-party resources will perform better than a technically flawless but slow site.
Does the PageSpeed score still have practical utility?
Yes, but as a benchmark and diagnostic tool, not a final objective. The score highlights improvement opportunities: uncompressed images, blocking JavaScript, lack of caching. These optimizations remain relevant for enhancing actual Core Web Vitals.
The trap is spending weeks trying to gain 3 points to reach 100 when the essentials are already in place. A score of 85+ on mobile is more than sufficient if the field metrics are good. Check your Core Web Vitals in Search Console rather than fixate on PageSpeed Insights.
- PageSpeed Insights = diagnostic, not a direct ranking criterion
- The Core Web Vitals measured in the field (CrUX) are what count for ranking
- A score of 85+ is sufficient if the actual user experience is good
- Mobile-friendliness and smooth interaction take precedence over technical perfection
- Focus on LCP, INP, and CLS rather than the overall score
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. For years, we have observed that sites with average PageSpeed scores (70-80) rank very well, sometimes better than technically flawless competitors. Content, backlinks, and thematic relevance remain far more powerful levers than a few performance points.
The Page Experience update of 2021 confirmed this: Google integrated Core Web Vitals as a ranking signal, but withmoderate weight compared to content relevance. A slow site that is comprehensive on a specialized query will often outperform a fast but shallow site. [To verify]: Google has never published the exact weight of each signal, so it is impossible to quantify the impact precisely.
What nuances should we add to this official stance?
Google says “mobile-friendly and fast,” but fast compared to what? The thresholds for Core Web Vitals are arbitrary: why 2.5 seconds for LCP and not 2 or 3? These values evolve. In 2018, an LCP of 3 seconds was acceptable. Today, it is borderline.
Another nuance: not all sectors are equal. A news site with dozens of ad scripts will naturally score lower than a minimalist blog. Google claims to compare similar sites, but competitive reality varies enormously. If your competitors are all at 60 on PageSpeed, being at 75 may suffice. If everyone is at 90, remaining at 70 penalizes you.
What situations does this rule not apply?
When your site is technically catastrophic. An LCP of 6 seconds, a CLS of 0.4, an INP of 800 ms: in such cases, PageSpeed Insights is rightly screaming at you. Google may tolerate an imperfect score, but not a broken user experience. Visitors bounce, engagement drops, and the algorithm detects this.
Another exception: ultra-competitive sectors where every detail matters. If you are competing for high-volume e-commerce keywords against larger players, neglecting performance will cost you positions. In such cases, aiming for 90+ on PageSpeed becomes relevant, not directly for Google, but because it improves conversion and engagement.
Practical impact and recommendations
What specific actions should you take to optimize without aiming for perfection?
Start by auditing your Core Web Vitals in Search Console, not in PageSpeed Insights. The Search Console shows you real field data over 28 days. If your URLs are mostly in the green, you are good. If you have red pages, focus on them.
Next, apply the Pareto principle: 20% of optimizations provide 80% of gains. Compress your images (WebP), enable browser caching, remove unnecessary blocking JavaScript, use a CDN. These four actions often raise a site from 60 to 85 on PageSpeed. The next 15 points require ten times more work for marginal impact.
What mistakes should you avoid when optimizing speed?
Do not sabotage the user experience in the name of performance. Some sites remove essential features (videos, interactive tools, high-resolution images) just to gain a few points. If it degrades conversion or engagement, you lose in the end. Google prefers an 80-rated site with a rich UX over a 95-rated site that is stripped to uselessness.
Another pitfall: optimizing only the homepage. PageSpeed Insights tests one URL at a time, but Google evaluates the entire site. If your category pages or product sheets are slow, it impacts your overall ranking. Audit a representative sample, not just the homepage.
How can I check that my site offers a high-quality experience?
Use multiple cross-measurement tools: Search Console for field data, PageSpeed Insights for diagnostics, WebPageTest to simulate different connections, Chrome DevTools to analyze loading under real conditions. If these sources converge on correct Core Web Vitals, you are in line.
Also, test on real mobile devices, not just in desktop emulation mode. A recent iPhone and a mid-range Android from three years ago do not provide the same experience. If your site is smooth on a mid-tier smartphone with an average 4G network, you cover most of your visitors.
- Audit your Core Web Vitals in Search Console (real field data)
- Implement basic optimizations: image compression, caching, CDN, lazy loading
- Do not sacrifice UX or features for a perfect score
- Test on a representative sample of pages, not just the homepage
- Check performance on real mid-range mobile devices
- Monitor behavioral signals (bounce rate, time on site) alongside technical metrics
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un score PageSpeed Insights de 60 peut-il pénaliser mon classement Google ?
Dois-je optimiser PageSpeed sur desktop si mon trafic est majoritairement mobile ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour que les améliorations de vitesse impactent le classement ?
Les Core Web Vitals sont-ils plus importants que le contenu pour le ranking ?
Faut-il supprimer Google Analytics ou Google Tag Manager pour améliorer PageSpeed ?
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