Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 1:33 La longueur des URL affecte-t-elle vraiment votre classement Google ?
- 1:33 Les points dans les URLs sont-ils vraiment sans danger pour le SEO ?
- 2:07 Les URLs courtes sont-elles vraiment privilégiées par Google pour la canonicalisation ?
- 5:02 Faut-il vraiment attendre 3 mois après une migration 301 pour récupérer son trafic ?
- 7:57 Les iframes tuent-elles vraiment l'indexation de votre contenu ?
- 11:04 Un redesign de site peut-il vraiment casser votre ranking Google ?
- 19:59 Pourquoi Google continue-t-il à crawler des URLs redirigées en 301 depuis plus d'un an ?
- 22:04 Fusionner deux sites : pourquoi le trafic combiné n'est jamais garanti ?
- 25:10 Faut-il ajouter du hreflang sur des pages en noindex ?
- 37:54 Pourquoi Google ne traite-t-il pas toutes les erreurs 404 de la même manière dans Search Console ?
- 40:01 Le maillage interne accélère-t-il vraiment l'indexation de vos nouvelles pages ?
- 43:06 Les content clusters sont-ils réellement reconnus par Google ?
- 44:41 Le breadcrumb suffit-il vraiment comme seul linking interne ?
- 49:52 Le duplicate content pénalise-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
Google does not automatically prioritize the homepage in its ranking algorithm. The weight of a page depends on its internal linking structure, not its position in the hierarchy. If the homepage often receives more links, it's solely because it appears in navigation templates — a technical consequence, not an intrinsic algorithmic advantage.
What you need to understand
Why does this clarification from Google change our perception?<\/h3>
For years, the homepage has been considered the most powerful page<\/strong> of a website by default. This belief was based on empirical observation: it naturally accumulates backlinks and internal PageRank.<\/p>
What Mueller reveals here is that Google does not code an intrinsic bonus<\/strong> for the homepage. If it performs well, it's solely because it mechanically benefits from more internal links through menus, footers, and templates present on all pages.<\/p>
The statement emphasizes a crucial point: you control the distribution of PageRank<\/strong> through your linking structure. If you want a category or product page to have more weight than an institutional homepage, you just need to adjust the links.<\/p>
Specifically, an e-commerce site can intentionally limit links to its homepage and massively push towards its categories<\/strong> or bestsellers. Google will follow this logic without algorithmic resistance.<\/p>
On some sites, the homepage acts only as a brand entry point<\/strong> without its own SEO value. Media sites, for instance, prioritize articles. Marketplaces push categories.<\/p>
If you remove the homepage from the main menu or limit its internal links, its SEO weight will mechanically drop<\/strong>. Google will not intervene to "artificially save" it.<\/p>
What does "influencing with internal linking" really mean?<\/h3>
When does the homepage lose its natural dominance?<\/h3>
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?<\/h3>
Yes, and it’s even an expected confirmation. SEO practitioners who employ PageRank Sculpting<\/strong> have long observed that one can manipulate the distribution of link equity by playing with internal links.<\/p>
On high-volume sites, we regularly see categories or listings outweigh the homepage<\/strong> in organic visibility. If Google structurally favored the root, these configurations would be impossible.<\/p>
Be cautious: Mueller refers to algorithmic weight<\/strong>, not actual visibility. A homepage often benefits from external signals (brand backlinks, direct traffic, mentions) that enhance its authority — and Google takes this into account.<\/p>
Saying "the homepage does not have an automatic bonus" does not mean it is weak by default<\/strong>. It generally remains the most linked page on the site, hence mechanically the most powerful. What Mueller explains is that this is not a hard-coded rule.<\/p>
On low internal linking sites<\/strong>, the homepage can indeed become a bottleneck. If it receives all the backlinks but does not effectively redistribute the link equity, you are wasting potential.<\/p>
Another trap: sites that mistakenly set their navigation links to nofollow<\/strong> (yes, it still happens). As a result, the homepage passes nothing, and Google treats it as a dead end. [To be checked]<\/strong> during your audits: how many sites break their own PageRank distribution without realizing it?<\/p>
What nuances should be added to this statement?<\/h3>
When can this logic pose a problem?<\/h3>
Practical impact and recommendations
How to redistribute SEO weight towards your strategic pages?<\/h3>
First step: map your current linking structure<\/strong>. Use Screaming Frog or Ahrefs to identify which pages receive the most internal links. You will likely see that the homepage dominates everything.<\/p>
Next, adjust your templates. Add contextual links<\/strong> to your categories or flagship products from visible areas (header, sidebar, content). Don’t rely solely on the main menu.<\/p>
Do not abruptly remove all links to the homepage. It remains a useful hub<\/strong> for user experience and crawling. The goal is to rebalance, not to break everything.<\/p>
Avoid over-optimizing your anchor texts as well. If you add 50 internal links with the exact anchor "best product X", Google will take notice. Vary the formulations and maintain a natural and contextual profile<\/strong>.<\/p>
Monitor the evolution of organic traffic by page type<\/strong>. If your categories or product sheets are progressing while the homepage stagnates, that's a good sign.<\/p>
On the technical side, track crawl budget<\/strong> data in Search Console. The pages you are pushing should be crawled more frequently. If nothing changes after several weeks, it means your linking structure did not have the expected effect.<\/p>
What mistakes should be avoided in this redistribution?<\/h3>
How to check if your strategy is working?<\/h3>
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
La homepage perd-elle du poids SEO si je la retire du menu principal ?
Dois-je privilégier ma homepage ou mes catégories dans mon maillage interne ?
Combien de liens internes minimum vers une page pour qu'elle ait du poids ?
Les backlinks vers la homepage se transmettent-ils aux pages internes ?
Peut-on complètement désoptimiser sa homepage sans impact négatif ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 07/05/2021
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