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Official statement

Google suggests limiting the number of links in the footer to avoid potential spam issues. However, relevant links such as those to contact pages or ‘About’ are acceptable.
7:18
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h20 💬 EN 📅 25/08/2017 ✂ 13 statements
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📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends limiting the number of links placed in a website's footer to avoid being perceived as spam. Useful links (contact, legal notices, about) are perfectly acceptable. The line remains blurry: it is more a matter of relevance and intent than a magic number.

What you need to understand

Why does Google care about footer links?

The footer is a strategic space that appears on every page of a website. Each link placed here benefits from maximum reach, making it a historically exploited area to manipulate PageRank.

Google has always closely monitored artificial link schemes. A footer packed with links pointing to irrelevant pages or external partner sites raises red flags. The search engine seeks to distinguish natural editorial links from attempts to manipulate rankings.

What constitutes a problematic footer according to Google?

A footer becomes suspicious when it contains dozens of links without added value for the user. Typically: endless lists of categories, links to every serviced city, or worse, link exchanges with partners unrelated to the content.

The issue is not so much the absolute number of links as their purpose. A footer with 50 useful and organized links can be acceptable. Another with 15 manipulative links will be penalized.

Are “acceptable” links truly neutral for SEO?

Mueller mentions contact pages, about pages, and legal notices. These links are indeed expected by users and present no problem. But are they entirely neutral in terms of PageRank?

No. Every link passes SEO juice, even to a legal page. The difference is that Google does not consider them as manipulative. They are part of the normal architecture of a website and respond to a legitimate navigation need.

  • The footer is visible on all pages, so each link benefits from maximum exposure
  • Google distinguishes legitimate intent from manipulation: useful links pass, artificial schemes are penalized
  • No magic number is given: relevance matters, not a quota of 10 or 20 links
  • “Acceptable” links pass PageRank, but Google does not view them as problematic
  • A cluttered footer can dilute the link equity of important pages and harm user experience

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices?

Yes, completely. Sites penalized for footer spam all exhibited obvious patterns: links to hundreds of cities, massive reciprocal link exchanges, or partner link blocks without value. No site has been penalized for placing contact, terms, and site maps in the footer.

The consistency is present, but the line remains blurry. Is an e-commerce site with 30 footer links to its main categories in the red zone? Not necessarily, if those links make sense for the user. The problem arises when those links become geographic keyword stuffing or external link dumping.

What nuances should be added?

Mueller does not give any numerical threshold, which leaves a huge margin for interpretation. A footer with 50 links can be legitimate for a large portal but excessive for a blog. [To be verified]: Does Google use a ratio between the number of footer links and the site's size? No public data confirms this.

Another nuance: the site structure matters. A mega horizontal menu followed by a dense footer can dilute the PageRank of important pages. Google may not necessarily penalize, but the internal link architecture suffers. The question is not just “am I risking a penalty?” but “am I maximizing my SEO effectiveness?”.

When does this rule not apply?

High authority sites (media, institutions) have more leeway. A footer with 40 links on Le Monde or Le Figaro will never be problematic, as the editorial context legitimizes this density. The rule primarily applies to small sites building authority, where every signal counts.

Well-organized multi-column footers with clear categories (“About,” “Services,” “Legal”) are better perceived than a simple endless vertical list. Google analyzes readability and intent, not just the link count. A structured footer with 25 well-organized links performs better than a haphazard block of 15 random links.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do practically with your footer?

First, audit the existing links. List all the links in your footer and ask yourself: “Does this link truly help the user?”. If the answer is no, delete it. Links to partner pages, unless there is strong editorial partnership, can be placed in nofollow or removed.

Next, structure in logical sections. An “About” footer (contact, team, history), “Legal” (terms, notices, GDPR), “Resources” (blog, FAQ) is clearer than a catch-all. Google appreciates clear semantic hierarchies, and so do users.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never use the footer for geographic keyword stuffing. “Plumber Paris 1st, Plumber Paris 2nd...” up to the 20th district is the best way to trigger a spam filter. If you need to target geographic areas, create dedicated landing pages and limit footer links to a relevant selection.

Avoid reciprocal link exchanges in the footer. “Our partners” followed by 20 clickable logos to sites unrelated to your content is a red flag. If there is a partnership, integrate those links into the editorial content with context, not in the global footer.

How can I check if my footer is compliant?

Use Search Console to spot any manual actions. If your site has been penalized for artificial links, the footer is often the cause. Next, do a simple test: open your footer in private browsing, without knowing your site. Do the links make sense for an external visitor?

Also compare your footer links / body content links ratio. If your footer contains more links than the average main content, that’s a red flag. Use a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) to measure the internal PageRank distribution and check that your strategic pages are not diluted by an overly dense footer.

  • Audit all footer links and remove those without user value
  • Structure the footer into clear semantic sections (About, Legal, Resources)
  • Ban geographic keyword stuffing and endless city lists
  • Set non-editorial partner links to nofollow or remove them
  • Check the footer links / body content links ratio with a crawler
  • Regularly monitor Search Console for any manual actions
The footer remains a structural element for navigation and SEO, but it must prioritize the user above all. Regular cleaning, clear structure, and focus on relevance are sufficient to stay within the guidelines. These internal linking optimizations can quickly become complex at the scale of a large site, and an architectural error can impact thousands of pages. If you manage a site with several hundred pages or a historically overloaded footer, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly errors and expedite compliance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de liens maximum peut-on mettre dans un footer sans risque ?
Google ne donne aucun chiffre précis. La limite dépend de la pertinence des liens et de la taille du site. Un footer avec 20-30 liens utiles et bien organisés est généralement acceptable, au-delà il faut justifier chaque lien.
Les liens footer transmettent-ils du PageRank ?
Oui, tout lien HTML suit transmet du PageRank par défaut. Les liens footer sont présents sur toutes les pages, ils ont donc une portée maximale. C'est pourquoi Google surveille leur usage.
Faut-il mettre en nofollow les liens légaux (CGV, mentions) dans le footer ?
Non, ce n'est pas nécessaire. Google considère ces liens comme normaux et attendus. Les mettre en nofollow n'apporte aucun bénéfice et complique inutilement la gestion.
Un footer avec des liens vers toutes les catégories produit est-il problématique ?
Cela dépend du nombre et de la pertinence. Un e-commerce avec 10-15 catégories principales en footer, c'est acceptable. Si tu listes 50 sous-catégories, tu dilues le PageRank et risques un signal spam.
Peut-on avoir plusieurs footers différents selon les sections du site ?
Oui, c'est même une bonne pratique pour les gros sites. Un footer contextuel (liens différents selon la section) améliore l'expérience utilisateur et optimise le maillage interne sans surcharger.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Pagination & Structure Penalties & Spam

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