Official statement
Other statements from this video 16 ▾
- 2:06 Les liens externes influencent-ils réellement le classement de votre site ?
- 4:03 Faut-il vraiment indexer tout son contenu ou faire du tri stratégique ?
- 4:40 Faut-il vraiment mettre nofollow sur tous les liens en commentaires ?
- 10:20 Les commentaires générés par les utilisateurs peuvent-ils vraiment booster votre SEO ?
- 18:00 Pourquoi baliser vos pages de catégorie en schema.org peut-il tuer vos rich snippets ?
- 34:00 Les balises hreflang sont-elles vraiment indispensables pour un site multilingue ?
- 40:20 AMP impacte-t-il vraiment le classement de vos pages dans Google ?
- 40:30 AMP booste-t-il vraiment votre positionnement dans Google ?
- 50:56 Le passage en HTTPS peut-il faire chuter votre classement Google ?
- 53:02 Faut-il vraiment afficher tous les schémas visibles pour les utilisateurs ?
- 53:02 Les avis clients cachés aux visiteurs peuvent-ils tromper Google ?
- 54:50 Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment inutile pour ranker sur Google ?
- 59:00 Google détermine-t-il vraiment la fréquence de crawl de façon autonome ?
- 59:04 Pourquoi les statistiques de crawl de votre site fluctuent-elles autant ?
- 82:49 La longueur du contenu influence-t-elle vraiment le classement dans Google ?
- 84:56 Comment réussir une migration HTTPS sans détruire votre référencement ?
Google claims that spam comments do not affect the ranking of your main content if you apply nofollow and moderate properly. The direct SEO impact is therefore limited, but user experience can seriously degrade if spam floods your pages. In reality, the true threat is not algorithmic but behavioral: visitors leaving due to a polluted comments section.
What you need to understand
How does Google differentiate spam comments from main content?
Google uses semantic segmentation algorithms to isolate editorial content from user-generated areas. The engine analyzes the HTML structure, tags, position on the page, and linguistic patterns to identify what is voluntary writing versus what comes from comments.
This ability to dissociate content areas explains why a blog can maintain its authority even with hundreds of promotional comments. The crawler does not mix your 2000-word analysis on HTTPS migration with links to Chinese poker sites posted below.
Why is nofollow still essential despite this separation?
Nofollow on links in comments prevents PageRank transfer to potentially toxic destinations. Without this attribute, your page becomes an unwitting relay in link spam schemes, even if the main content remains algorithmically protected.
Google detects sites that serve as deliberate spam platforms. A blog that massively allows dofollow links in its comments can be interpreted as complicit in a manipulation network, with consequences for the overall trust of the domain.
What does 'properly moderated' really mean according to Google?
The wording remains deliberately vague. Google does not set a specific quantitative threshold: 10% spam, 30%, 50%? No official metrics. The phrase suggests that a residual presence of spam is not dramatic if you demonstrate a moderation effort.
The question becomes: at what volume does spam cease to be 'residual' and become 'ubiquitous'? This is where the user experience signal comes into play. If visitors consistently bounce after scrolling to the comments, Google will pick up on this behavioral pattern.
- Algorithmic separation: Google isolates main content from comments in its qualitative analysis
- Nofollow required: protects against PageRank transfer to spammy destinations
- Relative moderation: no specific threshold provided, just a requirement for visible effort
- Behavioral signal: invasive spam degrades engagement metrics (time on page, bounce rate)
- Reputation risk: a lax site can be perceived as complicit in manipulation networks
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes, tests show that a site can maintain its positions in the SERPs despite a polluted comments section, as long as nofollow is applied. Cases where a quality blog loses traffic due to pure comment spam are rare, unless the site becomes a blatant link farm.
Where it gets tricky: Google downplays the indirect impact on conversion rates. A visitor landing on your page from an informational search and encountering 50 promotional comments in Chinese is unlikely to purchase your SEO training. The ranking holds, but the business suffers. [To check] if Google actually incorporates perceived quality signals into its ranking algorithms or if it confines them to engagement metrics.
What nuances should be added to this rule?
The statement does not cover community sites where comments ARE the main content. On a forum or a Q&A platform, user spam directly contaminates indexable value. The algorithmic separation does not work when there is no dominant editorial content.
Another blind spot: Core Web Vitals. Hundreds of spam comments can burden the DOM, slow down rendering, and degrade the Cumulative Layout Shift if not well integrated. Google says, 'no direct SEO impact,' but the technical weight can indirectly hurt your page experience score.
Should comments be disabled to simplify management?
No, unless you have no resources to moderate. Legitimate comments generate fresh additional content, long-tail keywords, and social signals (even if Google claims not to use them directly). An article with 30 qualitative comments often outperforms its version without interaction.
The real trade-off: compare the cost of moderation (human time or paid anti-spam tool) against the SEO value and engagement of real comments. On a corporate blog with 2 articles per month and zero community, disabling is rational. On an active thematic media site, it's a strategic mistake.
Practical impact and recommendations
How do you technically set up nofollow on comments?
All modern CMSs (WordPress, Drupal, Joomla) automatically apply rel="nofollow" to links posted in comments. Check the HTML source code of a page with comments: each tag should contain the nofollow attribute.
If you are using a custom system, add this rule at the level of the comment rendering template. Forgetting this turns your blog into a free distributor of SEO juice for online casinos and dubious pharmaceutical sites.
What tools can be automated to limit spam without manual moderation?
Plugins like Akismet (WordPress) or reCAPTCHA v3 block 95%+ of automated spam. The residue requires human intervention or keyword filters. Set up rules to hold comments containing URLs, certain suspicious TLDs (.xyz, .top), or Cyrillic text if your audience is French-speaking.
Never rely on a single filter. Combine CAPTCHA + anti-spam plugin + post-moderation of new contributors. Spammers adapt their techniques: what works in January will be circumvented in March.
When should you completely disindex comment pages?
If your site generates separate URLs for each comment (like some old-school forums), you create duplicate or thin content. Use a canonical tag pointing to the main page or a noindex on these isolated fragments.
The same logic applies to paged comment archives: /article/comments/page/47/ has no SEO value. Canonicalize to the source article or block indexing via robots.txt if the volume is massive and polluting your crawl budget.
- Ensure that all links in comments carry the rel="nofollow" attribute in the source code
- Install and configure an effective anti-spam plugin (Akismet, CleanTalk, reCAPTCHA v3)
- Enable mandatory moderation for first-time commenters, with automatic validation after
- Monitor Core Web Vitals: an excess of comments can degrade LCP and CLS
- Monthly audit a sample of pages: spam/legitimate comments ratio should not exceed 20%
- Set up keyword filters to automatically block recurring spam terms (viagra, casino, loan, etc.)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le nofollow sur les commentaires est-il encore pertinent depuis l'introduction du rel="ugc" ?
Un taux de spam élevé peut-il déclencher une pénalité algorithmique Panda ?
Faut-il supprimer rétroactivement les vieux commentaires spam ou juste les futurs ?
Les commentaires légitimes peuvent-ils améliorer le ranking d'une page ?
Désactiver complètement les commentaires peut-il nuire au SEO ?
🎥 From the same video 16
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h05 · published on 23/02/2017
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