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Official statement

There are no specific technical requirements, mandatory formats, or necessary meta tags to appear in Discover (except for not blocking crawls). You need to create content that your audience really likes. Large preview images are possible by default with AMP or via meta tags.
22:57
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 37:34 💬 EN 📅 12/06/2020 ✂ 18 statements
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Other statements from this video 17
  1. 1:06 Why does Google suddenly show more non-indexed URLs in Search Console?
  2. 3:11 Why does Google only crawl a fraction of your known pages?
  3. 5:17 Core Web Vitals: Why do your laboratory tests fail to impact your ranking?
  4. 9:30 Does user-generated content really expose your site's SEO liability?
  5. 11:03 Should you include all your pages in a general sitemap?
  6. 12:05 Does the source of content affect the crawl budget?
  7. 13:08 Does Googlebot send an HTTP referrer when crawling your site?
  8. 14:09 Does image quality really affect rankings in Google’s web search?
  9. 18:15 How does Google really assess the importance of your pages through internal linking?
  10. 20:19 Is it true that a well-ranked website can lose its relevance without making any mistakes?
  11. 21:53 Are Core Web Vitals truly a ranking factor or just smoke and mirrors?
  12. 25:02 Can removing pages from a sitemap actually limit their crawling by Google?
  13. 27:08 Should you really use unavailable_after to manage temporary content?
  14. 30:11 Does structured data really influence rankings on Google?
  15. 31:45 Why does Google sometimes index your AMP pages before their canonical HTML version?
  16. 33:52 Are Core Web Vitals truly crucial for Google ranking?
  17. 35:51 Does Google really see the content loaded dynamically after a user clicks?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that no specific meta tags, mandatory format, or strict technical criteria are required to appear in Discover—besides not blocking crawls. The only priority is to create content that your audience truly appreciates. For SEO practitioners, this means shifting the focus from technical optimizations to user engagement, even though some gray areas persist regarding the actual selection criteria.

What you need to understand

Does Discover impose specific technical requirements?

John Mueller's stance is clear: no mandatory technical format is required to be eligible for Discover. No particular meta tags, no enforced data structure, no technical checklist to validate.

The only absolute technical rule? Do not block the crawl of Googlebot. If your pages are generally accessible and indexable, you already meet the one official technical prerequisite. The rest is more about editorial decisions than engineering.

Why does Google emphasize audience appreciation so much?

Discover is not a traditional search channel—it's a recommendation feed based on each user's history and interests. Unlike the SERP where search intent drives results, Discover relies on engagement prediction.

Google aims to maximize time spent in its ecosystem. Content that generates clicks, reading time, and low immediate bounce rates sends the right signals. Thus, the algorithm favors content that truly captivates, not content that merely ticks technical boxes.

What does it really mean to 'create content that your audience appreciates'?

This phrasing remains intentionally vague. Google does not precisely define appreciation metrics: reading time? Bounce rate? Social interactions? Recurring visits to the domain?

What is certain is that Discover rewards content that generates behavioral engagement. Formats that tend to work well: in-depth analyses, hot news, rich visual content, trending topics in the user's niche. Generic content or content purely optimized for bots is unlikely to succeed.

  • No specific meta tag is required for Discover eligibility (except for large preview images)
  • The only absolute technical prerequisite: allow the crawl of Googlebot on your pages
  • The focus is on editorial quality and user engagement, not on technical optimizations
  • Large preview images require either AMP or specific meta tags (max-image-preview:large)
  • Discover works like a personalized recommendation feed, not like a traditional SERP based on intent

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?

The reality on the ground is more nuanced than this straightforward statement. While indeed no meta tag is strictly required, some technical configurations clearly influence performance in Discover.

Sites that perform well in Discover often share common characteristics: fast servers, solid Core Web Vitals, high-resolution optimized images, impeccable mobile-first architecture. Saying there are "no technical criteria" is technically true for eligibility, but misleading for actual performance. [To be verified]: Google provides no data on speed or technical quality thresholds that favor placement.

What gray areas still persist despite this clarification?

Google remains vague on several critical points. First, the precise definition of "content that your audience appreciates"—no official metrics are cited. Next, the actual weight of behavioral signals: CTR from Discover? Reading time? Scroll rate?

Another ambiguity: the role of content freshness. Observations indicate that Discover heavily favors recent content (less than 48 hours old), but Google does not make this an official requirement. The same applies to publication frequency: sites that publish daily seem to gain better visibility, without formal confirmation.

Attention: The absence of "specific technical requirements" does not mean that technical aspects are unimportant. UX performance remains a significant indirect factor—a slow or poorly optimized mobile site generates less engagement, thus less presence in Discover.

Is the specific case of large preview images worth focusing on?

Here, Google becomes more directive. To display large preview images in Discover (those that span the entire width of the feed), there are two options: implement AMP or add the meta tag max-image-preview:large.

In practice, AMP is declining, and most publishers now use the meta tag. However, Google does not clarify if large images improve CTR or appearance rates—it is inferred that they do, but no official data exists. What is certain is that poor-quality or poorly framed images hurt performance, whether large or small.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should be taken to maximize your chances in Discover?

Start by ensuring your pages are crawlable and indexable without hindrance. Robots.txt, meta robots, canonical: everything must be clean. Next, focus on editorial quality: catchy titles, current or evergreen topics with high value, and original angles.

On the visual side, invest in high-resolution images (at least 1200px wide) and add the meta tag <meta name="robots" content="max-image-preview:large">. Optimize the weight of these images to avoid slowing down loading speeds—Discover is mostly mobile, and users are impatient.

What mistakes should be avoided to prevent penalties?

Do not block the crawl of your strategic pages—this may seem obvious, but some sites inadvertently block via robots.txt or server rules. Avoid hard paywalls immediately: Discover favors accessible content, even though a "light" paywall after a few paragraphs is tolerated.

Another pitfall: publishing bland, generic, or overly traditional SEO-optimized content. Discover detects real engagement—an article stuffed with keywords but lacking editorial substance will not pass. Finally, neglecting mobile is a dealbreaker: a poorly adapted mobile site generates bounce rates, which leads to disappearing from the feed.

How can you check if your site is properly configured for Discover?

Use the Search Console: the "Performance" tab now includes a Discover filter that shows impressions and clicks generated. If you never appear despite relevant content, check indexing, mobile speed (PageSpeed Insights), and image quality.

Also test behavioral engagement: install an advanced analytics tool (Hotjar, Clarity) to measure actual reading time, scroll rate, and drop-offs. These indirect signals likely influence your presence in Discover. If your UX metrics are low, correct them before seeking more complex optimizations.

  • Check that Googlebot's crawl is not blocked anywhere (robots.txt, meta robots, server)
  • Add the meta tag max-image-preview:large to enable large preview images
  • Produce high-resolution images (minimum 1200px) optimized in weight
  • Prioritize topics with high engagement potential: news, exclusive analyses, rich visual formats
  • Optimize Core Web Vitals, especially on mobile (LCP, CLS, INP)
  • Monitor Discover performance in Search Console to adjust your editorial strategy
Discover does not require any complex technical feats to be eligible, but maximizing visibility demands a strict editorial approach coupled with impeccable user experience. If your team lacks the resources or expertise to orchestrate this dual constraint—producing engaging content while maintaining high-level technical performance—hiring a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate your results. Personalized support allows for the quick identification of priority levers and to avoid costly visibility errors.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je obligatoirement utiliser AMP pour apparaître dans Google Discover ?
Non, AMP n'est pas obligatoire. Google confirme qu'il n'y a aucun format technique imposé pour l'éligibilité Discover. AMP permet simplement d'activer les grandes images preview, mais vous pouvez obtenir le même résultat avec la meta tag max-image-preview:large.
Quels meta tags sont nécessaires pour Discover ?
Aucun meta tag n'est strictement requis pour être éligible à Discover. Si vous voulez afficher de grandes images preview, ajoutez la meta tag robots avec la valeur max-image-preview:large. C'est le seul cas où un meta tag spécifique est recommandé.
Comment Google mesure-t-il qu'une audience « apprécie » un contenu ?
Google ne communique pas les métriques exactes, mais l'engagement comportemental joue probablement un rôle majeur : temps de lecture, taux de rebond, interactions, retours récurrents sur le domaine. L'algorithme Discover privilégie les contenus qui retiennent l'attention et génèrent de l'interaction.
La vitesse de chargement influence-t-elle la présence dans Discover ?
Indirectement, oui. Même si Google n'impose pas de seuils techniques stricts, un site lent génère plus de rebond et moins d'engagement, ce qui pénalise la visibilité dans Discover. Les Core Web Vitals restent un levier important pour maximiser les performances.
Faut-il publier fréquemment pour être visible dans Discover ?
Google ne l'impose pas officiellement, mais les observations terrain montrent que Discover privilégie les contenus récents et les sites qui publient régulièrement. Une fréquence de publication cohérente semble favoriser la présence dans le flux, sans que ce soit une règle formelle.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Crawl & Indexing Discover & News AI & SEO Images & Videos Mobile SEO

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