Official statement
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Google states that it's not necessary to add the nofollow attribute to footer links between sites owned by the same company, as long as they primarily link by brand name. For a few sites, there's no issue — but for hundreds of interconnected sites, the webspam team might take a closer look. The nuance lies here: the line between legitimate networks and manipulation remains blurry.
What you need to understand
Why does Google tolerate footer links between sites of the same group?
Google's official position is pragmatic: a company owning several brands or sites has legitimate reasons to create links between its digital properties. A group like LVMH can legitimately link Vuitton, Dior, and Sephora in the footer without Google seeing it as manipulation.
The key recommendation? Link by brand name only. No optimized anchors like "buy luxury bag Paris" in these footers. Just the business name. This directive allows Google to easily distinguish legitimate navigation links from dubious optimization attempts.
Where does Google draw the line?
Mueller talks about a "handful of sites" versus "hundreds of sites" interconnected. This kind of statement often leaves SEOs wanting — how many exactly? 5 sites is OK, 10 too, but 50? 100?
The reality is that Google does not set a numerical threshold. The webspam team will examine intent. If you own 200 legitimate sites with differentiated content, distinct editorial teams, and own audiences — no problem. If you operate 200 satellite domains with poor content just for PageRank sculpting, that's another story.
Does the nofollow attribute really protect against risk?
Adding nofollow to these links is not a magic protection. Google can easily identify a network of sites even with nofollow links — and if the manipulative intent is obvious, nofollow won't change the potential penalty.
Conversely, legitimate dofollow links between group sites won't trigger a penalty. The nofollow was mainly a precaution from another time, when SEOs feared any uncontrolled PageRank transfer. Today, Google analyzes the whole pattern, not just the attribute.
- Footer inter-site links of the same group do not require nofollow if the link is made by brand name only
- A few interconnected sites pose no problem — the blurry limit starts at several dozen or hundreds
- The webspam team examines overall intent, not just the presence or absence of nofollow
- The key recommendation: anchor = brand name, no semantic optimization in these footers
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
In essence, yes. We regularly observe multi-site conglomerates ranking without issue despite footers with cross-links. Institutional sites, press groups, e-commerce holdings — all link their properties in the footer without suffering downgrade.
However, the gray area remains massive. Mueller says nothing about PBN networks disguised as "business groups." Nothing about quantitative thresholds. Nothing about timing — does adding 10 new sites at once with all footer links trigger a red flag? [To be verified] as no public data confirms this.
What nuances should be added to this directive?
First point: this tolerance applies to links between sites of the same company. If you create a fictitious pseudo-group just to justify a link network, Google won't be fooled. The legal entity must be real and verifiable.
Second nuance: "link by brand name" is a clear directive, but what about semantic variations? "Sephora" vs "Sephora Boutique" vs "Sephora Perfumerie" — how far can we go without crossing into optimization? Mueller does not clarify. My real-world experience: sticking to the strictest (exact business name) limits any risk.
In what cases does this rule NOT apply?
If your sites have no real organizational link — for example, an SEO managing 50 different clients and adding cross-footer links among them — this statement does not concern you. Google will see this as an artificial link scheme, point blank.
Another problematic case: sites with nearly identical or very similar content (duplicate or thin content). Even if the company is unique, if the 100 sites are barely re-skinned clones, the webspam team will examine the whole as spam, footer links or not.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to stay compliant?
First, audit your current footer links. If you're using optimized anchors ("best accounting firm Paris"), replace them immediately with the strict brand name. Google explicitly recommends this approach — better to comply.
Next, check for organizational consistency. Do your sites legitimately belong to the same entity? Do they have coherent legal mentions, identical or linked SIRET/SIREN, identifiable teams? If an external audit cannot trace the connection between your properties, Google will have a hard time too — but it will look deeper.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not multiply sites without a clear editorial reason. Creating 20 domains to segment by city or keyword is exactly what Google considers manipulation. Each site should have a unique value proposition, an own audience, substantial original content.
Avoid also massive additions of footer links at once. If you create a new site and instantly interconnect it with 50 other properties via footer, the pattern looks suspicious. Better to roll out gradually, organically, as sites mature.
How can you check that your setup is compliant?
Use the Search Console to monitor manual actions. If Google detects an artificial link scheme, you will receive a notification. No news? Good sign, but not an absolute guarantee — algorithmic penalties are silent.
Also check the coherence of your inbound link profile. If 80% of your backlinks come from your own footer sites, even if legitimate, your profile is unbalanced. A healthy site acquires a diversified set of external links — your footers should represent just a marginal fraction of the total.
- Replace all optimized footer anchors with strict brand names
- Audit the legal and organizational consistency of your sites
- Limit the number of interconnected sites — prioritize quality over quantity
- Deploy footer links gradually, never in bulk at once
- Monitor the Search Console for any manual action
- Check that footer links represent only a small part of the total backlink profile
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de sites maximum peut-on interconnecter en footer sans risque ?
Les liens footer doivent-ils absolument être en nofollow si les sites ne sont pas du même groupe ?
Peut-on varier légèrement l'ancre du nom de marque (ex: ajouter "boutique" ou "site officiel") ?
Les liens footer transmettent-ils encore du PageRank même sans nofollow ?
Un réseau PBN peut-il se protéger en créant une structure juridique commune ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 21/08/2020
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