Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 1:08 How does my site get included in the Chrome User Experience Report without signing up?
- 1:08 How does your site end up in the Chrome User Experience Report?
- 2:10 How can you measure Core Web Vitals when your site isn't in CrUX?
- 3:14 Can negative reviews really penalize your Google ranking?
- 3:14 Can negative reviews really hurt your Google ranking?
- 7:57 Should you really separate sitemaps for pages and images?
- 7:57 Does splitting your sitemaps truly impact crawling and indexing?
- 9:01 Could a 304 Not Modified code actually prevent your pages from being indexed?
- 9:01 Is the 304 Not Modified code really a trap for your indexing?
- 11:39 Is Google Cache really not useful for assessing a page's SEO quality?
- 13:51 Why doesn't your niche change generate any traffic despite all your SEO efforts?
- 14:51 Are link directories truly dead for SEO?
- 17:59 Do translated pages really count as duplicate content in Google's eyes?
- 17:59 Are translated pages really treated as unique content by Google?
- 20:20 Why does Google ignore your canonical tags, and how can you enforce separate indexing for your regional URLs?
- 22:15 Why does Google overlook your canonical on multi-country sites?
- 23:14 Why is your Search Console crawl budget skyrocketing for seemingly no reason?
- 23:18 Why is your Search Console crawl budget skyrocketing for no apparent reason?
- 25:52 Should you really limit the crawl rate in Search Console?
- 26:58 Hreflang and geo-targeting: Can Google really ignore your international signals?
- 28:58 Are Hreflang and Canonical really reliable for geographic targeting?
- 34:26 Why is Search Console showing the wrong URL for Hreflang and Canonical?
- 34:26 Why does Search Console display a different canonical than what appears in the SERP for your hreflang pages?
- 38:38 How does Google really differentiate between two sites in the same language but targeting different countries?
- 38:42 Should you canonicalize all your country versions to a single URL?
- 38:42 Should you really keep each hreflang page self-canonical?
- 39:13 How can local signals help you prevent canonicalization between your multi-country pages?
- 43:13 Should you really abandon country variations in hreflang?
- 45:34 Is it really necessary to use hreflang for a multilingual website?
- 47:44 Do Facebook comments really impact your site's SEO and EAT?
- 48:51 Should you isolate UGC and News content in subdomains to avoid penalties?
- 50:58 Should you create a lightweight version for Googlebot to speed up crawling?
- 50:58 Should you focus on optimizing your site speed for Googlebot or your actual users?
- 50:58 Should you serve a streamlined version of your pages to Googlebot to improve crawl efficiency?
- 52:33 Can you create local pages by city without risking penalties for doorway pages?
- 52:33 How can you tell a legitimate city page from a penalizable doorway page?
- 54:38 Has Google's manual action for doorway pages disappeared in favor of algorithmic solutions?
- 54:38 Are doorway pages still subject to manual penalties from Google?
Google states that the presence or absence of a page in its cache has no relation to its quality or ranking. It's merely a technical byproduct of internal systems. To check what Googlebot actually sees, you need to use the URL Inspection tool in Search Console, not the cache, which is not a reliable indicator of crawling or indexing.
What you need to understand
Why Is There Confusion Between Cache and SEO Performance?
For years, checking Google Cache was an automatic reflex to validate that a page was crawled and indexed. This habit originates from a time when SEO diagnostic tools were less developed, and the cache represented one of the few windows into the internal workings of the engine.
The problem: many have turned this technical diagnostic practice into a quality indicator. A page absent from the cache was perceived as penalized, of low value, or poorly optimized. Google breaks this correlation — and it's crucial to understand why.
What Does This Statement Really Mean for Our Audits?
Mueller emphasizes a fact: the cache is a side effect of internal systems, not a ranking signal. In practical terms, a page can be perfectly indexed, well-ranked, and not appear in the cache. Conversely, a low-quality page can temporarily be present.
The nuance: this doesn’t mean that the cache is useless. It remains a potential snapshot of content seen by Googlebot, but it's a secondary tool. The official and reliable tool is the URL Inspection in Search Console — end of story.
What Technical Mechanisms Explain This Independence?
Google Cache is not synchronized with the ranking indexes. It's a stored copy for system performance and archiving reasons, managed by retention rules that have nothing to do with content quality. Some pages may be purged from the cache to save space, while others stay for mere technical happenstance.
The distributed architecture of Google complicates matters further: multiple data centers, several specialized indexes, several layers of cache. What you see in cache:yoururl.com depends on the queried data center and its local retention policy — nothing more.
- The cache does not reflect the indexing status of a page in the main search index.
- The absence of cache does not indicate a crawl issue or an algorithmic penalty.
- URL Inspection in Search Console is the go-to tool for diagnosing what Googlebot actually sees.
- The cache can be desynchronized: outdated version, random purge, latency between data centers.
- No established correlation between cache presence and positions in the SERPs.
SEO Expert opinion
Is This Statement Consistent with Real-World Observations?
In fifteen years of practice, I've seen top 3 pages that have no trace in the cache, and orphaned pages languishing there for months. Mueller’s statement confirms what we observed empirically: the cache is not a quality barometer. It’s a technical artifact.
What remains unclear: Google does not specify which internal systems decide on cache presence nor their frequency of updates. We remain vague on the exact retention rules. [To be verified] through A/B testing on pages with different profiles to map out caching patterns.
What Nuances Should Be Added Depending on the Site Type?
On high-volume sites (e-commerce with tens of thousands of references), a systematic absence of cache on certain categories may signal an architectural problem — exhausted crawl budget, excessive depth, cannibalization. Here, it’s not the cache that’s the problem; it’s a symptom of structural dysfunction.
For low-update frequency sites (institutional, corporate), the absence of cache is generally innocuous. However, if the URL Inspection shows a different HTML version from the one in production, that’s a real red flag — JavaScript rendering issues, unintentional cloaking, or poorly managed redirects.
In What Cases Should This Rule Be Challenged?
Let’s be honest: if none of your strategic pages ever appear in the cache AND Search Console shows repeated crawl errors, there’s a real problem. The cache isn't the cause, but the accumulation of negative signals should raise concern.
Another edge case: sites under aggressive CDN or Cloudflare with overly strict caching rules may send HTTP headers that disrupt Googlebot. Again, it's not Google Cache that’s the problem; it's the server configuration — but a lack of cache may be a diagnostic hint.
site:yourdomain.com and the URL Inspection tool before panicking. The cache is a symptom, never a diagnosis.Practical impact and recommendations
What Should You Do Concretely to Diagnose Correctly?
Stop checking the cache as a first reflex. Go straight to Search Console, URL Inspection tab. Enter the complete URL, wait for real-time analysis, and carefully read the 'Coverage', 'Improvements', and 'HTML Rendering' sections. This is the official version of what Googlebot saw during the last crawl.
If you suspect a content freshness issue, trigger a live test in Search Console. This forces Googlebot to recrawl immediately and shows you the current version — much more reliable than any fossilized cache in a random data center.
What Mistakes to Avoid in Your SEO Audits?
Don’t note “absence of cache” as a blocking point in your audit reports anymore. It’s a false positive that dilutes the credibility of your recommendations. Focus on actionable metrics: server response time, crawl depth, consumed crawl budget, real indexing rate.
Another trap: using third-party tools that scrape the cache to “analyze” your pages. These tools are now obsolete and can mislead you. Invest in solutions that query the Search Console API directly or simulate Googlebot with an authenticated user-agent.
How to Integrate This Directive into Your Daily Processes?
Revise your audit checklists and your SOPs (Standard Operating Procedures). Systematically replace “check the cache” with “inspect the URL via Search Console.” Train your teams to use the Inspection tool as a basic reflex, not as an exceptional recourse.
For high-volume sites, automate monitoring via the Search Console API: regularly extract crawl data, identify URLs with rendering errors or abnormal HTTP statuses, and trigger alerts. It's more scalable and reliable than any manual cache check.
- Systematically replace cache checks with the URL Inspection tool in Search Console.
- Use the live test to force an immediate recrawl and obtain the current view of Googlebot.
- Remove “absence of cache” from your audit reports as a criterion of quality or ranking.
- Automate monitoring via the Search Console API for high page volume sites.
- Train your teams to distinguish between technical symptoms (cache) and reliable diagnostics (Search Console).
- Document your audit processes to avoid perpetuating outdated SEO myths.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je m'inquiéter si mes pages n'apparaissent pas dans le cache Google ?
Le cache Google peut-il servir à diagnostiquer des problèmes de rendu JavaScript ?
Pourquoi certaines pages restent-elles longtemps dans le cache alors qu'elles ont été mises à jour ?
L'outil Inspection d'URL remplace-t-il complètement le cache pour les audits SEO ?
Le cache Google influence-t-il le crawl budget ou la fréquence de visite de Googlebot ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 04/08/2020
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.