Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 2:15 Faut-il retirer le hreflang des pages en noindex ou qui redirigent ?
- 5:04 Le texte superflu sur les pages produits peut-il nuire à votre classement dans Google ?
- 7:15 Peut-on vraiment bloquer son site de Google Discover dans certains pays ?
- 9:33 Le texte alternatif doit-il vraiment décrire l'image plutôt qu'optimiser vos mots-clés ?
- 12:12 Les transactions e-commerce influencent-elles le classement Google ?
- 16:55 Faut-il vraiment désavouer tous ces backlinks « toxiques » ?
- 23:45 URL et balises title : faut-il vraiment choisir entre les deux pour optimiser son SEO ?
- 25:49 Hreflang protège-t-il vraiment du duplicate content entre pays ?
- 30:04 Google remplace-t-il vraiment vos meta descriptions par du contenu navigationnel ?
- 32:10 Pourquoi le rapport d'ergonomie mobile ne couvre-t-il qu'un échantillon de vos pages ?
- 34:25 Pourquoi Google crawle-t-il moins votre site après une mise à jour algorithmique ?
- 36:57 Le link building « stable sur le long terme » est-il vraiment un signal d'alarme pour Google ?
- 43:40 Migrer vers une nouvelle plateforme : faut-il craindre un impact négatif sur vos rankings ?
- 47:02 Le contenu dupliqué pénalise-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
John Mueller states that breadcrumb structured data on a homepage offers no significant SEO advantages. The reason? There is no logical breadcrumb path to a homepage, which already represents the top of the hierarchy. Essentially, focus your Schema.org implementation efforts on deeper pages where the breadcrumb makes sense.
What you need to understand
Why does Google consider breadcrumbs on the homepage to be useless?
Google's logic is based on the hierarchical structure of a site. A breadcrumb represents the path from the root (homepage) to the current page. On the homepage itself, this path simply does not exist — you are already at the top.
Technically, implementing BreadcrumbList Schema.org on a homepage creates an empty or circular structure (Home > Home). Google finds no exploitable information to understand the depth of navigation or the context of the page.
What’s different about deep pages where breadcrumbs make sense?
On a product page or a blog article, breadcrumbs enrich the rich snippets in the SERPs. They display the full path (e.g., Home > Category > Sub-category > Product), enhancing the organic CTR by providing visual context.
This markup also helps Google understand the informational architecture of the site. The deeper the page, the more valuable the breadcrumb becomes as a structuring signal — it indicates the parent-child relationship between URLs.
Does this statement contradict the official Schema.org recommendations?
No, it clarifies them. The Schema.org documentation does not forbid breadcrumbs on the homepage, but it also does not see the utility of them. Mueller simply confirms what practitioners observe: no measurable impact on organic performance.
Some CMS automatically add this markup everywhere, including on the root. It's not penalizing — just unnecessary. Google completely ignores it during structured data processing.
- Homepage = hierarchical top: no logical path to itself
- Breadcrumb rich snippets: only useful on deep internal pages
- No penalty if implemented by mistake, but wasted dev resources
- Prioritize implementation on categories, product pages, articles, service pages
- Search Console validation: check that only relevant pages generate breadcrumb snippets
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. Audits of thousands of sites confirm that adding BreadcrumbList on the homepage neither changes the ranking nor the appearance of snippets. Google simply displays the standard title and description — never a breadcrumb in the SERPs for a brand or navigational query targeting the root.
The nuance: some technical SEO audit tools flag the absence of structured breadcrumb on the homepage as an error. This is a false alert. These tools apply generic rules without understanding the real hierarchical logic.
When could we still implement it?
If your CMS automatically generates the markup via a global plugin, removing it only on the homepage can create complex technical exceptions. The effort/benefit ratio often isn’t worth it — the impact on performance is null in either direction.
Rare exception: a multilingual site where the local homepage (e.g., /fr/, /de/) isn’t technically the absolute root. Even then, the breadcrumb remains debatable — it's better to use hreflang and Organization Schema to clarify the structure.
What implementation errors does this clarification help to avoid?
Many developers create circular breadcrumbs on the homepage due to lack of knowledge of the spec. They generate JSON-LD with a single item pointing to itself, which unnecessarily pollutes the DOM and crawl budget with redundant data.
Another pitfall: on one-page sites or landing pages, some add fictitious breadcrumbs (Home > Section 1 > Section 2) when there are no distinct URLs for each section. Google rejects this markup as misleading — it seeks real navigable paths, not anchors.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done with existing breadcrumbs on the homepage?
If the markup is already in place via a global system, do not waste time removing it. Focus your resources on high-impact optimizations: breadcrumbs on product pages, categories, blog articles.
For new projects, configure your Schema.org generator to automatically exclude the homepage from the list of pages receiving BreadcrumbList. This cleans up the code and avoids future confusion during audits.
How should we prioritize the implementation of breadcrumbs across the rest of the site?
Identify high organic traffic pages located 3+ clicks from the root. These are the pages that benefit most from enriched breadcrumbs in the SERPs — measurable CTR improvement between 5% and 15% depending on the sectors.
Intermediate categories (level 2-3 of the taxonomy) are particularly critical. They combine search volume and sufficient depth for the contextual path to provide real informational value to the user scanning the results.
What tools can be used to check the consistency of the implementation?
Search Console remains the go-to resource: the Improvements > Breadcrumbs tab lists all pages where Google has detected and validated the markup. If the homepage appears here with a “Valid” status, it's a signal that it’s ignored on the SERP display side.
Complement this with a Screaming Frog crawl filtering pages with BreadcrumbList. Export the list, cross-reference with click depth — any page at 0 or 1 click (homepage, main sections) can be deprioritized for this type of markup.
- Exclude the homepage from the automatic generation of BreadcrumbList in the CMS
- Prioritize implementation on level 3+ pages of the hierarchy (products, articles, sub-categories)
- Check in Search Console that only relevant pages generate breadcrumb rich snippets
- Avoid fictitious breadcrumbs on one-page landing pages without distinct URLs
- Test SERP display in incognito mode for long-tail queries targeting deep pages
- Document the exclusion logic for future developers involved in the project
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le breadcrumb HTML visible sur la homepage doit-il être retiré également ?
Est-ce que Google pénalise un site qui a quand même implémenté BreadcrumbList sur la racine ?
À partir de quelle profondeur de clic le breadcrumb structuré devient-il utile ?
Les breadcrumbs améliorent-ils directement le ranking ou seulement le CTR ?
Faut-il utiliser BreadcrumbList ou d'autres types Schema.org sur homepage ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 21/02/2020
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