What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

It is acceptable to add an FAQ section to a page (such as a product or category page) even if it didn't exist before, as long as the FAQ is genuinely useful and relevant to the user. However, mechanically creating nearly identical FAQs across thousands of pages or using FAQs as disguised advertisements violates the guidelines.
65:15
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h14 💬 EN 📅 04/06/2020 ✂ 44 statements
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Other statements from this video 43
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  5. 3:50 Why is Google delaying the complete transition to the Mobile-First Index?
  6. 7:07 Can Google really delay Mobile-First Indexing indefinitely?
  7. 11:00 Why doesn't Google canonicalize URLs with fragments in sitelinks and rich results?
  8. 11:00 Do URLs with fragments (#) in Search Console mean you need to rethink your tracking and analysis strategy?
  9. 14:34 Why do the numbers from Analytics, Search Console, and My Business never match?
  10. 14:35 Why do your Google metrics never align between Search Console, Analytics, and Business Profile?
  11. 16:37 How are FAQ clicks really counted in Search Console?
  12. 18:44 Are mobile and desktop accordions really neutral for SEO?
  13. 18:44 Is it true that mobile accordion hidden content is indexed as visible content?
  14. 29:45 Does the rel=canonical via HTTP header really still work?
  15. 30:09 Does the HTTP header rel=canonical really work to manage duplicate content?
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  17. 31:02 Is it true that all sites indexed after July 2019 default to Mobile-First Indexing?
  18. 33:28 Why does Google emphasize textual context in Search Console feedback?
  19. 33:31 Are Search Console tools really enough to solve your indexing problems?
  20. 33:59 Why are your pages still not indexed after 60 days in Search Console?
  21. 37:24 What happens when Google occasionally indexes HTTP instead of HTTPS even after an SSL migration?
  22. 37:53 Is it really necessary to combine both 301 redirections AND canonical tags for an HTTPS migration?
  23. 39:16 What really causes your sitemap to fail in Search Console and how can you effectively resolve the issue?
  24. 41:29 Is your brand disappearing from the SERPs for no apparent reason: can Google feedback really fix it?
  25. 44:07 Should you choose a subdomain or a new domain for launching a service?
  26. 44:34 Subdomain or New Domain: What Does Google Really Think for SEO?
  27. 44:34 Do Google penalties really transfer between domains and subdomains?
  28. 45:27 Do Google penalties really spread between domains and subdomains?
  29. 48:24 Should you really overlook PageRank when deciding between a domain and a subdomain?
  30. 48:33 Do links between root domains and subdomains really pass PageRank?
  31. 49:58 Should you really be worried about duplicate content from scraping?
  32. 50:14 Can you relaunch an old domain without being penalized for duplicate content by spammers?
  33. 50:14 Should you really report every scraping URL via the Spam Report to prompt action from Google?
  34. 57:15 Is it really necessary to report spam URL by URL to assist Google?
  35. 58:57 Why does Google refuse to show your FAQs in rich results despite perfect markup?
  36. 59:54 Why doesn't Google display your FAQ rich results even with perfect markup?
  37. 65:45 Can you really add a FAQ just to get the rich result without risking penalties?
  38. 67:27 Should you still optimize rel=next/prev tags for pagination?
  39. 67:58 Should you really submit all paginated pages in the XML sitemap?
  40. 70:10 Should you really index all category pages to optimize your crawl budget?
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google explicitly allows the addition of FAQ sections on product or category pages even if they didn't exist before, as long as they provide real value to the user. The determining factor is not the initial intent (SEO or not), but the relevance and concrete usefulness for the visitor. However, mechanically duplicating almost identical FAQs across thousands of pages or turning these sections into disguised advertising violates the guidelines and exposes one to manual penalties.

What you need to understand

Does Google really differentiate between SEO intent and user value?

This statement cuts through a debate as old as schema.org markup: Can structured content be added just to snag rich results? The answer is yes, but with a significant nuance. Google does not penalize the SEO intention itself – after all, optimizing for search is our job. What matters is that the added content genuinely serves the user once they land on the page.

Specifically, if you add an FAQ to a product sheet to get a rich display in search results, Google won’t penalize you as long as this FAQ addresses real questions your visitors have. The engine bets that the alignment between technical optimization and real utility will yield better outcomes for everyone. This is a pragmatic stance that acknowledges that SEO and UX are not necessarily antagonistic.

Where is the exact line you should not cross?

Google sets two clear boundaries. The first: mechanical duplication on a large scale. If you automatically generate nearly identical FAQs on thousands of pages by simply changing the product or city name, you're out of the game. This pattern reveals a purely manipulative intent with no regard for the user.

The second limit concerns disguised advertising use. An FAQ that only promotes your brand, reiterates marketing messages, or crams in keywords without providing factual answers violates the spirit of the format. Google expects the Question/Answer format to be used for what it is: an informational tool, not an ad space.

Does this tolerance apply to all types of pages?

The statement explicitly mentions product and category pages, but the principle logically extends to any type of page where an FAQ provides documented value. A service page, a long-form blog article, a thematic landing page – all of these contents can legitimately include an FAQ section if it addresses recurring questions.

The key is that relevance must be verifiable. If you analyze your customer support data, internal search queries, or sales conversations and they bring up specific questions, you have a solid basis for creating a legitimate FAQ. Conversely, inventing questions that no one is asking just to include keywords exposes you to manual or algorithmic rejection of the markup.

  • SEO intention is not a problem as long as the added content genuinely serves the end user
  • Mechanical duplication of FAQs across thousands of pages with minimal variations violates the guidelines
  • FAQs as disguised advertising or keyword stuffing are explicitly prohibited
  • Relevance must be verifiable via real data (support, internal search, analytics)
  • The format applies to all types of pages where legitimate questions arise from the user journey

SEO Expert opinion

Does this position truly reflect manual validation practices?

Let’s be honest: the consistency between official statements and on-the-ground actions is not always guaranteed. We've seen sites lose their FAQ rich snippets even when the content seemed perfectly legitimate. The problem often comes from the volume and deployment pattern. If you add 5,000 FAQs in one week across as many pages, even if well-written, you’re likely triggering algorithmic alerts.

The other friction concerns the evaluation of "real utility" – a criterion that is inherently subjective. What seems like a legitimate question to you might be viewed as filler by a quality rater or an algorithm. [To be verified]: Google has never published a clear quantitative threshold (number of FAQs per page, acceptable similarity rate between pages, minimum response length) that would allow for objective validation of compliance.

What is the real motivation behind this displayed tolerance?

Google has every interest in encouraging widespread adoption of structured markup. The more quality schema.org data in the index, the more the engine can refine its rich results and potentially reduce traffic to third-party sites – by answering directly in the SERP. This permissive statement encourages sites to structure their content without excessive fear of penalty.

However, there’s a trade-off: Google must maintain the quality of rich snippets to avoid degrading user experience in the SERPs. Hence this tolerance, conditioned on real relevance. The engine bets that the majority of sites will play the game honestly, and that massive abuses will be detectable enough for manual intervention. It’s a fragile balance between incentive and control.

In what cases does this rule not really protect?

If you operate in ultra-competitive sectors (health, finance, legal), the validation standards are objectively stricter. An FAQ that perfectly complies with this statement can be denied the rich snippet if Google believes the topic requires explicit medical or legal authority. The YMYL adds a layer of friction that the generic statement does not mention.

Similarly, certain page formats trigger higher algorithmic suspicion. Pages automatically generated from databases (directories, comparators, aggregators) are scrutinized differently. Even with relevant and unique FAQs, you may encounter a filter that detects the massive generation pattern. The technical context of the site influences as much as the content itself.

Warning: This statement does not constitute an absolute shield against manual actions. If your history already contains penalties for thin content or spam, the massive addition of FAQs – even compliant ones – may reactivate heightened scrutiny from quality raters on your domain.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I ensure my FAQs pass the real relevance test?

First step: document the source of each question. Create a table that maps each FAQ to a verifiable source: customer support ticket with a minimum occurrence (say 5+ mentions), internal search query, question asked during a sales chat, recurring comment on social media. If you cannot justify the legitimacy of a question, don’t publish it.

Second safeguard: test the genuine diversity of responses. Take 10 FAQs at random from different pages and compare them. If over 60% of the text is identical (excluding product/city names), you are likely in the dangerous zone of mechanical duplication. Responses should reflect the real specifics of each page – not just variables in a template.

What deployment strategy minimizes the risks of rejection?

Avoid instant massive deployment at all costs. If you have 2,000 pages to equip with FAQs, stagger it over 3-6 months in coherent thematic batches. Start with your highest traffic pages where you have the richest user data. This also allows you to measure the impact progressively and adjust before generalizing.

Favor a cluster approach: deploy first on a segment of pages (a product category, a geographic area), observe results for 4-6 weeks, then extend. If Google detects a suspicious pattern, you limit the damage to a subset of the site. And vary FAQ formats: number of questions (between 3 and 8), response length, editorial tone – this diversity signals human creation rather than algorithmic.

How to monitor that Google is actually accepting and displaying my FAQ rich results?

Do not rely solely on Search Console. Utilize automated SERP tracking tools that capture your positions and the features displayed for your target queries daily. Some FAQ rich snippets may appear intermittently depending on search contexts – you need to detect these patterns.

Set up alerts for sudden losses of rich results. If 50+ pages lose their rich display within 48 hours, it’s likely an algorithmic or manual action requiring immediate investigation. Lastly, analyze the differential CTR: compare the click-through rate on pages with FAQ rich snippets vs. without. If the gap is less than 15-20%, either your FAQ isn’t attractive enough, or Google isn’t consistently displaying it.

  • Document the verifiable source of each FAQ question (support, internal search, analytics)
  • Test the similarity of responses between pages – aim for less than 60% textual duplication
  • Gradually deploy in thematic batches over 3-6 months for large volumes
  • Vary formats (number of questions, length, tone) to avoid mechanical patterns
  • Monitor daily the actual display of rich snippets using SERP tracking tools
  • Set up alerts for sudden massive losses of rich results
Adding FAQs for rich results is legitimate if user relevance is documented and verifiable. The main risks are large-scale mechanical duplication and instant massive deployment that trigger negative algorithmic signals. A gradual, documented, and diversified approach minimizes these risks while capturing SEO benefits. However, these optimizations involve coordination among technical, editorial, and analytics teams, which can be complex to orchestrate internally – support from a specialized SEO agency often helps accelerate deployment while ensuring compliance with evolving Google guidelines.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je utiliser les mêmes questions FAQ sur plusieurs pages en changeant juste les réponses ?
Oui, tant que les réponses sont réellement spécifiques à chaque page et apportent une valeur différenciée. Si les réponses restent quasi-identiques malgré des contextes différents, vous tombez dans la duplication mécanique interdite.
Combien de questions FAQ minimum faut-il pour obtenir un rich snippet ?
Google n'impose pas de minimum officiel, mais en pratique on observe que 2-3 questions suffisent rarement. Viser 4-8 questions pertinentes offre un meilleur équilibre entre valeur utilisateur et probabilité d'affichage enrichi.
Les FAQ ajoutées uniquement en schema.org sans affichage visible comptent-elles ?
Non. Google exige que le contenu balisé soit visible pour l'utilisateur sur la page. Un balisage FAQ invisible ou caché viole les guidelines de données structurées et expose à un rejet ou une action manuelle.
Est-ce risqué d'ajouter des FAQ sur des milliers de fiches produit d'un site e-commerce ?
Le risque dépend de la méthode. Si chaque FAQ est unique et basée sur des données produit réelles (questions clients, spécificités techniques), c'est acceptable. Si vous dupliquez un template avec variations minimales, vous violez la règle anti-duplication mécanique.
Google peut-il retirer mes rich snippets FAQ même si je respecte les guidelines ?
Oui. Google se réserve le droit de ne pas afficher un rich result même conforme, selon la qualité globale du site, la concurrence sur la requête, ou des ajustements algorithmiques. La conformité réduit les risques mais ne garantit pas l'affichage.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Structured Data E-commerce Featured Snippets & SERP AI & SEO Pagination & Structure

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 04/06/2020

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