Official statement
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Google recommends sending an HTTP 404 code for permanently deleted products, along with a customized error page offering relevant alternatives. This approach allows the search engine to properly remove these URLs from its index while keeping the user on the site. The nuance? This logic does not uniformly apply to all cases of out-of-stock or temporary removal.
What you need to understand
Why does Google insist on a 404 code rather than a redirect?
Google's position is based on a straightforward principle: a disappeared product should not mislead the engine. When you systematically redirect to the homepage or a category, you send a misleading signal (301 or 302 code) suggesting that the content exists elsewhere.
The 404 code allows Googlebot to understand that this specific URL no longer needs to be indexed. Without this clear signal, the URL can remain in the index for weeks, generate frustrated traffic, and dilute the overall quality of your presence in the results. The customized 404 page keeps the user engaged by suggesting similar products or relevant categories.
Does this recommendation apply to all types of product disappearances?
No, and this is where Mueller's statement lacks precision. Distinguish between a permanently deleted product and a temporary out-of-stock situation. An item restocking in three weeks should not return a 404 but rather a 200 code with schema.org tags indicating availability.
Websites managing thousands of seasonal references (fashion, toys, electronics) face different issues than niche sites with 50 stable products. The business context dictates the technical strategy, not a blind universal rule.
What does an effective customized 404 page look like to Google?
Google expects a page that properly returns the HTTP 404 code server-side, while also offering a rich user experience browser-side. Too many sites visually show an error but return a 200 code (soft 404), which blocks the de-indexing process.
The page should offer contextually relevant links: products in the same category, comparable alternatives, or even an integrated search. The goal is twofold: to help the lost user AND to reduce the bounce rate that could penalize engagement signals on the site.
- Real HTTP 404 code returned server-side, checkable via developer tools or a cURL test
- Useful content on the error page: links to categories, similar products, internal search engine
- Clear distinction between permanent deletion and temporary stock-out in your stock management strategy
- Regular monitoring of 404s through Search Console to detect anomalies or broken external links
- Avoid automatic redirects to the homepage that dilute the signal and frustrate the user
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, overall. E-commerce sites applying this logic do indeed see deleted product URLs exit the index more quickly, often within 2-4 weeks depending on crawl frequency. However, Mueller remains silent on a critical point: the transfer of SEO juice.
When a product disappears but had quality backlinks or a good ranking history, pure 404 means losing that capital. Some practitioners see better results by redirecting to a specific equivalent product (not a generic category), especially if the original URL had significant authority. [To verify]: Google has never provided numerical data on the loss of PageRank in this specific scenario.
What nuances should be considered based on the type of catalog?
The recommendation works well for fast-turnover catalogs with low individual SEO value (fast-fashion textiles, consumables). It becomes questionable for long-cycle products with heavy SEO investment: high-end appliances, B2B industrial, technical niches.
In these cases, each product sheet may have generated rich content, detailed reviews, and themed backlinks. Destroying this value with a harsh 404 can sometimes be a strategic error. A 301 redirect to the exact successor model, along with migration of reviews and enriched content, may prove more profitable. The decision depends on the ROI of each URL, not on a mechanical rule.
In what cases does this rule clearly not apply?
The first blatant case: temporary stock-outs. If the product returns in two weeks, a 404 triggers unnecessary de-indexing followed by a costly re-indexing in crawl budget. Use a 200 code with schema.org OutOfStock and an estimated return date instead.
The second exception: recurring seasonal products. An artificial Christmas tree disappears in January but reappears in October. The annual 404 would force Google to relearn the URL each cycle, whereas an "off-season" status with 200 would maintain latent indexing. The third case involves range migrations where the old model has a real commercial equivalence with the new one.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you verify that your 404 pages return the correct HTTP code?
Never rely on what you see in the browser. Test the actual HTTP code using developer tools (Network tab, Status column) or an online cURL test. Too many CMSs visually display "Error 404" while returning a 200 code, creating soft 404s that Google hates.
Also check in Search Console, Coverage section, Excluded tab. Real 404s appear under "Not Found (404)". If your deleted products are listed under "Page with redirect" or worse "Indexed, not submitted in the sitemap", your technical setup is flawed.
What architecture should a high-performing 404 page in e-commerce have?
Build a contextual recommendation logic based on the URL or metadata of the disappeared product. If you remove "/nike-pegasus-38-running-shoes", your 404 should suggest the Pegasus 39, other Nike running options, or the premium running category.
Technically, this often involves a server-side script that parses the requested URL, extracts attributes (brand, category, range), and queries your active product database to generate relevant suggestions. Off-the-shelf solutions ("Here are our best sellers") are lazy and ineffective. The user was looking for a specific product, not your generic top 10.
Should you keep 404s indefinitely or clean them up?
Google eventually removes 404s from its index, but external backlinks pointing to these URLs remain active. If you accumulate thousands of 404s with residual traffic or incoming links, you lose opportunities.
Regularly audit (quarterly) your 404s via Search Console or your server logs. Identify those still receiving traffic or backlinks, and decide on a case-by-case basis: 301 redirect to a relevant equivalent, or maintain the 404 if no coherent alternative exists. This analysis often requires data cross-referencing (Analytics, Majestic/Ahrefs, Search Console) that can quickly become time-consuming on large catalogs.
- Test the actual HTTP code of your deleted product pages using developer tools or a cURL test
- Set up a customized 404 page that recommends contextually relevant products, not generic content
- Distinguish in your business workflow between permanent deletion (404) and temporary stock-outs (200 + schema OutOfStock)
- Quarterly audit your 404s to identify those retaining valuable traffic or backlinks
- Train your marketing/product teams to understand that intentional 404s are not technical errors
- Monitor soft 404s in Search Console and correct the server configuration if necessary
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un code 404 pénalise-t-il le référencement global du site ?
Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour désindexer une page en 404 ?
Que faire si un produit supprimé possède de nombreux backlinks de qualité ?
Faut-il retirer les URLs 404 du sitemap XML ?
Comment différencier techniquement rupture temporaire et suppression définitive ?
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