Official statement
Other statements from this video 19 ▾
- 1:34 Les redirections font-elles vraiment perdre du PageRank ou pas ?
- 1:35 Les redirections multiples diluent-elles réellement le jus de lien transmis ?
- 2:05 Les redirections sur sous-domaines vers l'externe pénalisent-elles vraiment votre SEO ?
- 2:36 Les redirections diluent-elles vraiment la puissance de vos liens ?
- 7:28 Pourquoi vos pages n'apparaissent-elles pas dans l'index malgré votre sitemap ?
- 15:33 Les erreurs 404 impactent-elles vraiment votre positionnement dans Google ?
- 15:42 Faut-il supprimer les pages de profil avec peu de contenu pour éviter une pénalité ?
- 16:47 Les filtres canoniques peuvent-ils empêcher Google d'indexer vos produits ?
- 17:41 Faut-il encore utiliser 'noindex' dans robots.txt ou est-ce déjà obsolète ?
- 19:56 Faut-il vraiment passer tous vos liens externes en nofollow par défaut ?
- 21:14 La canonisation vers la page 1 peut-elle ruiner l'indexation de vos produits ?
- 26:02 Le texte d'ancrage des liens internes influence-t-il vraiment le positionnement ?
- 26:17 Le texte d'ancrage interne influence-t-il vraiment la compréhension de vos pages par Google ?
- 39:23 La compression d'images impacte-t-elle vraiment votre classement Google ?
- 46:01 Le Data Highlighter reste-t-il pertinent pour tester les données structurées ?
- 46:05 Faut-il abandonner le Data Highlighter pour implémenter du balisage structuré directement ?
- 54:42 Faut-il vraiment éviter les redirections IP automatiques sur les sites multilingues ?
- 55:16 Faut-il vraiment limiter les redirections IP à la page d'accueil pour le SEO multilingue ?
- 60:12 Les appels publicitaires non affichés impactent-ils vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
Google continues to crawl deleted URLs even if they no longer appear in the sitemap. Maintaining redirects prevents 404 errors that harm user experience and preserves accumulated link equity. Removing a redirect too early can lead to traffic and authority losses if external links still point to the old URL.
What you need to understand
Why does Google revisit URLs that are missing from the sitemap?
The XML sitemap is just a guideline for Googlebot, not an exhaustive list of pages to crawl. The search engine discovers and revisits URLs through internal and external links, crawl history, and user signals.
A URL removed from the sitemap remains accessible through existing backlinks, browser favorites, or forgotten internal links in old pages. Google may continue to visit it for weeks or even months. If the redirect disappears prematurely, these visits can generate 404 errors, which clutter the Search Console.
What is the concrete risk of removing a redirect too early?
Removing a redirect before Google has fully deprecated the old URL results in a loss of link equity. Backlinks pointing to the deleted page become orphaned and no longer pass PageRank to the new destination.
Users accessing the old URL via an external link or history encounter a error page. This degrades the experience, increases the bounce rate, and can negatively impact the behavioral signals that Google analyzes to assess a site's quality.
How long should a redirect be kept in place?
Google does not provide a precise duration, making planning difficult. Most practitioners observe that 301 redirects should remain active for at least 6 to 12 months for the engine to fully transfer link equity and update its index.
The optimal duration depends on several factors: the volume of backlinks pointing to the URL, the site's crawl frequency, and how quickly Google deindexes the old page. A flagship product with many incoming links requires a longer redirect than a marginal product listing.
- Keep redirects even after removing from the sitemap to avoid 404s
- Google discovers URLs through backlinks, crawl history, user signals, not just the sitemap
- Removing a redirect too early leads to loss of link equity and degraded UX
- Recommended minimum duration: 6 to 12 months based on the backlink profile
- Monitor the Search Console to detect when Google stops crawling the old URL
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. SEO audits regularly reveal sites that have removed redirects after just a few weeks, thinking that the disappearance from the sitemap was sufficient. The result: persistent 404 errors in the Search Console, a drop in rankings for key queries, and a gradual decline in organic traffic.
Tests show that Google can continue to crawl a deleted URL for several months if external backlinks remain active. The engine does not trust the sitemap as the sole source: it validates its crawling decisions by cross-referencing multiple signals. Removing a redirect before the engine has completed its reevaluation is like cutting a bridge while vehicles are still crossing it.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller remains vague on the exact duration for keeping redirects. This ambiguity leaves practitioners in a bind: keeping redirects indefinitely burdens server configuration and may pose long-term maintenance issues. [To verify]: Google should clarify whether a minimal crawl threshold (for example, zero visits for 3 consecutive months) allows for the safe removal of a redirect.
Another missing point is the type of redirect. A permanent 301 indicates to Google that the change is definitive and accelerates the transfer of equity. A temporary 302, mistakenly used, slows this process and may keep the old URL in the index longer than necessary.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
If a product is removed without a replacement, redirecting to the homepage or a generic category creates a poor user experience. In this case, a well-designed 404 or 410 page (with suggestions for similar products) may be preferable, even if it generates temporary errors in the Search Console.
For e-commerce sites managing thousands of SKUs with rapid turnover, keeping all redirects indefinitely becomes unmanageable. A gradual purging strategy based on crawl metrics (using server logs and Search Console) is more realistic than systematic retention. The key is to monitor URLs with high backlink potential.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely to manage redirects after removal?
Establish a review process before any redirect removal. Analyze server logs to identify URLs still crawled by Googlebot, even several months after removal from the sitemap. Cross-reference this data with the Search Console to identify pages still generating clicks or impressions.
Document each redirect with a creation date and context (replaced product, page merging, restructuring). This traceability allows for periodic reassessment of each redirect's relevance without risking premature removal of a critical rule. For high-volume sites, a centralized CSV file with the status of each redirect facilitates tracking.
What mistakes should be avoided in managing product redirects?
Never create redirect chains (A → B → C). If a product B replacing A is itself replaced by C, update the initial redirect to point directly from A → C. Chains dilute link equity and slow loading times, degrading user experience.
Avoid redirects to irrelevant pages. Redirecting an out-of-stock product to the homepage or a vague category frustrates users, and Google may consider this a soft 404. Prioritize redirecting to a specific category page or a similar product. If no alternative exists, a 410 Gone page (permanent removal) with suggestions may be more honest than a forced redirect.
How can I check if my site is managing redirects correctly?
Regularly audit the server logs to spot redirected URLs still visited by Googlebot. Frequent crawling of an old URL several months after its removal indicates that active backlinks still point to it. Use tools like Screaming Frog or OnCrawl to map redirects and detect chains or loops.
Monitor the Coverage and Crawl reports in the Search Console. An increase in 404 errors after the removal of redirects signals a premature withdrawal. Manually test old product URLs through a browser in incognito mode to ensure redirects work and point to relevant destinations.
- Analyze server logs to identify redirected URLs still crawled by Google
- Keep redirects for a minimum of 6 to 12 months after removal from the sitemap
- Document each redirect with date and context to facilitate periodic review
- Avoid redirect chains by updating existing rules
- Favor redirects to relevant pages or use a 410 if no alternative exists
- Monitor the Search Console for any increase in 404 errors post-removal
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il conserver une redirection après suppression d'un produit ?
Supprimer une URL du sitemap suffit-il à arrêter le crawl de Google ?
Peut-on rediriger un produit supprimé vers la page d'accueil ?
Que faire si aucun produit de remplacement n'existe ?
Comment savoir quand supprimer une redirection sans risque ?
🎥 From the same video 19
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 04/04/2017
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