Official statement
Other statements from this video 21 ▾
- 1:43 Does Google really rewrite your meta descriptions if they contain too many keywords?
- 4:20 Why does altering the Analytics code hinder Search Console verification?
- 5:58 Why does your hreflang markup still not work despite your efforts?
- 5:58 Should you choose hreflang language only or language+country for your international versions?
- 9:09 Does Hreflang really only affect displayed URLs while Google insists on indexing just one version?
- 12:32 Why does your site completely disappear from Google's index, and how can you recover it?
- 15:51 Does the URL Parameter Tool really consolidate all signals as Google claims?
- 19:03 Do core updates really not penalize any technical errors?
- 23:00 Does the outdated content tool really just hide the snippet instead of affecting indexing?
- 23:56 Is the site: command really useless for diagnosing indexing?
- 23:56 Does the URL removal tool truly deindex your pages?
- 26:59 The 50,000 URLs in a sitemap: why does this limit not mean what you think it does?
- 30:10 Is it true that BERT penalizes websites that lose traffic after its rollout?
- 32:07 Does Google Images really select the right image for your pages?
- 33:50 Should you really include details like price, reviews, and ratings in your anchor texts?
- 35:26 What happens when your internal linking isn't bidirectional?
- 40:12 Is repetitive internal anchor text really a concern for Google?
- 42:48 Do UTM parameters really cause Google to index duplicate content?
- 45:27 Does mixed content HTTPS/HTTP really impact Google rankings?
- 47:16 Does hreflang in HTML really weigh down your pages, or is that just a myth?
- 53:53 Why do old URLs stay indexed after a 301 redirect?
Google does not systematically index all pages on the web, especially on new sites that publish massive amounts of content. Crawling systems take a cautious approach to new domains, intentionally limiting exploration and indexing. For an SEO practitioner, this means prioritizing quality over quantity and investing in promotion rather than relying on manual submission via the Inspect URL tool.
What you need to understand
Does Google really promise to index the entire web?
No, and John Mueller states it clearly: Google does not guarantee the indexing of any page, even those you manually submit. This statement confirms what many practitioners observe in the field: indexing is a privilege, not a guaranteed right.
The engine operates with resource constraints — crawl budget, processing capacity, storage — and must make choices. When a site suddenly appears with hundreds or thousands of pages, algorithms interpret this behavior as potentially suspicious. Spam, content farms, automated generation: risk signals are triggered.
Why are new sites particularly affected?
A domain without history, without solid backlinks, and without established trust signals represents an unknown for Google. Therefore, systems adopt a conservative strategy: limited crawling, partial indexing, prolonged observation.
In practical terms, even if you publish 500 articles at once on a new site, Google may index 20 of them, then wait to see how those pages perform, whether they receive traffic, links, or engagement. This is a form of probationary period during which the engine assesses whether your content deserves space in its index.
Is the Inspect URL tool useless then?
No, but it should not be attributed with magical powers. Submitting a URL via Search Console does trigger a priority crawl, but it does not guarantee immediate indexing or permanent indexing.
Google may visit the page, analyze it, and decide that it does not meet quality criteria or that it duplicates existing content. The tool is mainly used to accelerate the discovery of an important page (new product, critical fix), not to force the indexing of low-quality content in bulk.
- Indexing is never guaranteed, even with manual submission
- New sites undergo enhanced filtering during the first weeks/months
- Massively publishing content at once triggers algorithmic alert signals
- Google prioritizes quality over quantity and waits for proof of value
- Promoting the site (backlinks, traffic, mentions) speeds up trust building
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with what is observed in the field?
Absolutely. SEOs launching niche sites or e-commerce sites are well aware of this phenomenon: zigzag indexing. Google indexes a few pages, then pauses, sometimes for weeks. Some URLs enter and exit the index for no apparent reason.
What Mueller describes corresponds to the behavior of a system that tests the reliability of a source before allocating resources to it. This is rational from Google's perspective: indexing is expensive, and the web is overflowing with auto-generated content, duplicated or of no value. It’s better to be cautious.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
Mueller refers to "sudden large amounts of content," but he does not provide any quantitative threshold. 50 pages? 500? 5000? Impossible to say, and this is where ambiguity becomes problematic. [To be verified]: does publishing 100 articles in a month on a new domain systematically trigger this filtering, or do much higher volumes need to be involved?
Another point: the
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely when launching a new site?
First, forget the strategy of “big dumps” of content. Publishing 300 articles at once because you’ve invested in outsourced writing is counterproductive. Google will slow down, and you’ll have paid for content that will languish for months in limbo.
Opt for a gradual ramp-up: start with 10-20 quality pages, then add content at the rate of a few publications per week. It may seem slow, but it’s what works to build algorithmic trust. In parallel, invest in editorial backlinks and direct traffic (social media, newsletters, specialized forums).
What mistakes should be avoided when indexing stagnates?
Don’t spam the Inspect URL tool. Submitting 50 pages a day changes nothing, and it can even send a negative signal. Google sees that you are pushing hard, which potentially reinforces the suspicion of spam.
Also, avoid panicking and making massive changes to the content or structure of the site after two weeks without indexing. Give it time — 4 to 8 weeks is not uncommon for a new domain before a stable indexing dynamic is established. If after 3 months nothing changes, then yes, you should investigate (blocked crawl, manual penalty, content quality).
How can I check if my approach is working?
Follow indexing progress via the Search Console: indexed pages graph, coverage report, crawl logs. A gradually rising curve is a good sign. A flat or yo-yo curve indicates that Google is still hesitant.
Also analyze the server logs: frequency of Googlebot visits, crawl depth, visited pages. If the bot only visits every three days and never goes beyond the homepage, it means the crawl budget is minimal — a sign that Google isn’t prioritizing your site yet.
- Launch with 10-20 quality pages rather than 500 average pages
- Add content gradually (a few pages per week)
- Invest in editorial backlinks from the beginning to speed up trust
- Avoid overusing the Inspect URL tool — reserve it for critical pages only
- Be patient 4-8 weeks before concluding there is an indexing problem
- Monitor progress via Search Console and server logs
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant que Google indexe un nouveau site ?
Soumettre une URL via Inspect URL garantit-il son indexation ?
Est-ce qu'ajouter un sitemap XML accélère l'indexation d'un nouveau site ?
Pourquoi certaines pages sont indexées puis disparaissent de l'index ?
Les backlinks accélèrent-ils vraiment l'indexation d'un nouveau site ?
🎥 From the same video 21
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 13/05/2020
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