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Official statement

Pages can either improve or degrade over time. If Google has collected signals about a page in the past and you significantly improve it, Google's systems may re-evaluate that page and recognize that it is now much better.
18:10
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:22 💬 EN 📅 27/11/2020 ✂ 23 statements
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Other statements from this video 22
  1. 1:37 Should you really stop using the URL inspection tool to index your pages?
  2. 1:37 Does the overall quality of a site truly influence its crawl frequency?
  3. 2:22 Should you really stop using the URL Inspection Tool to get your pages indexed?
  4. 9:02 Does Google really combine hreflang signals from HTML, sitemaps, and HTTP headers?
  5. 9:02 Can you really target multiple countries with a single hreflang page?
  6. 10:10 What happens when your hreflang tags contradict each other between HTML and sitemap?
  7. 11:07 Should you use rel=canonical between multiple sites in the same network to prevent signal dilution?
  8. 13:12 Are links between sites of the same network really treated as normal links by Google?
  9. 14:14 Do Google’s manual actions really focus on global patterns, or can they also sanction isolated cases?
  10. 16:54 Does the length of your anchor text really impact your SEO?
  11. 20:04 Do keyword-rich anchor texts serve as a negative signal for Google?
  12. 20:36 Can Google really ignore your links without giving you any warning?
  13. 29:42 Does Google really keep your content in its original language instead of translating it?
  14. 30:44 Does Google translate your queries to display foreign content?
  15. 32:00 Do old customer reviews harm the ranking of your product listings?
  16. 33:21 Does the search volume for your brand really boost your SEO?
  17. 34:34 Are iFrames really crawled by Google, or should you avoid them for SEO?
  18. 46:28 How can you verify if your cookie banners are blocking Google’s indexing?
  19. 47:02 Does the cached page truly reflect what Google indexes?
  20. 51:36 How can you effectively manage multiple versions of technical documentation without jeopardizing your SEO?
  21. 54:12 Does a revoked manual action truly wipe out all traces of a penalty?
  22. 54:46 Should you really delete your disavow file or risk a manual action?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that its systems can re-evaluate a page if it significantly improves after an initial negative assessment. This statement confirms that the search engine does not permanently freeze its judgment on a URL. For SEOs, this means that a content overhaul or technical optimization can trigger a re-evaluation — but with no guarantee on timing or clear methodology for what constitutes a 'significant improvement.'

What you need to understand

What does Google mean by 're-evaluation' of a page?

When Google crawls a page for the first time, its algorithms collect signals: content quality, technical performance, authority, user behavior. These signals form a sort of initial profile. If the page disappoints — thin content, slow speed, low relevance — it receives a poor ranking.

Re-evaluation is the process by which Google crawls that same page later and recalculates its signals. Mueller specifies that if the improvements are 'significant,' the systems may recognize that the page is now better. In practical terms? A new crawl, a new analysis, a new potential ranking.

Why this statement now?

This communication answers a recurring question among practitioners: should one create a new URL or improve the existing one? Many thought that a page once 'burned' in the index would remain handicapped for a long time. Mueller clarifies that Google does not hold a grudge against a URL forever.

The timing is also interesting: with the frequent Core Updates and the rise of generative AI, Google emphasizes freshness and evolving quality. A page frozen in time risks losing ground, while an improved page can bounce back.

What 'signals' does Google exactly collect?

Mueller remains deliberately vague. We can deduce that the signals include: depth and quality of content (via NLP models like BERT/MUM), Core Web Vitals, backlinks and authority, time on page, and bounce rate (via Chrome/Android), content freshness. But it is impossible to know the relative weight of each signal.

That's where it gets tricky: saying that a page can be re-evaluated is one thing. But what level of improvement triggers this re-evaluation? Is adding 200 words enough? Does one need to overhaul 80% of the content? How long until the re-crawl? Google provides no figures.

  • Google crawls and re-evaluates improved pages — it's not a myth.
  • The improvement must be 'significant' — a publicly undefined threshold.
  • Old signals are not frozen for life — a page can bounce back.
  • Re-evaluation offers no guaranteed timing — it may take weeks or months.
  • No indication of the relative weight of signals — impossible to prioritize optimizations.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with observed practices in the field?

Yes, overall. We regularly see pages that bounce back after a redesign — enriched content, speed improvements, backlinks added. URLs previously thought dead sometimes rise again after a Core Update if they've been reworked. So Mueller's assertion matches experience.

But be careful: this does not mean that every improvement leads to a quick re-evaluation. On sites with low crawl budgets, a page may linger in limbo for months even after a major update. And for ultra-competitive queries, a simple content improvement often isn't enough — external authority signals are also needed.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First nuance: Mueller talks about 'Google's systems,' in plural. This means that multiple algorithms are involved — Panda for quality, Penguin for links, Core Updates for overall relevance. A page may be re-evaluated by one system but not by another. The result: uneven gains depending on the queries.

Second nuance: [To verify] — there’s nothing that indicates re-evaluation completely erases history. If a page was spam for years and then cleaned up, Google may retain some form of 'negative memory.' Sometimes we see URLs struggling to take off even after a complete overhaul, likely due to a past degraded authority signal.

Practitioner Alert: Do not confuse re-evaluation with immediate reindexing. Google can crawl your page without recalculating all its ranking signals. A crawl is a necessary condition but not sufficient. If your page does not appear in SERPs after improvement, first check that it has indeed been crawled (Search Console > URL Inspection), then wait for a Core Update to pass — that’s often when large re-evaluations occur.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If your page is under manual penalty, no automatic re-evaluation will save the day. You need to fix the issue, submit a reconsideration request, and wait for human validation. Automated systems do not lift manual sanctions.

Another case: orphaned or voluntarily de-indexed pages (noindex, blocking robots.txt). You can improve them as much as you want; if Google does not crawl them anymore, they will never be re-evaluated. Make sure your strategic pages are accessible and well-linked.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should you take to trigger a re-evaluation?

First, improve substantially the content. Add missing sections, answer related questions, enrich with examples, data, and visuals. A simple cosmetic facelift is not enough — aim for at least 30% to 50% new or revamped content.

Next, optimize the technical performance: loading time, Core Web Vitals, schema.org markup. Google claims that these signals count, so if you improve the content but leave a page that takes 5 seconds to load, you sabotage your chances of positive re-evaluation.

What mistakes should be avoided in this process?

Don’t change the URL without reason. Some SEOs think that a new URL starts from scratch and avoids negative history. This is often counterproductive: you lose age, backlinks, accumulated authority. Mueller confirms that Google can re-evaluate an existing URL — so keep it and rework it.

Another mistake: improving a page and then waiting passively. Force the crawl via Search Console (URL Inspection > Request Indexing). Don’t rely on chance. And don’t settle for just one crawl: continue to monitor your ranking changes over several weeks.

How can you check if the re-evaluation has indeed occurred?

Track the date of last crawl in Search Console. If Google regularly re-crawls your page after your modifications, that's a good sign. Next, watch impressions and clicks: a positive re-evaluation typically corresponds to an increase in impressions on your target queries.

But be patient. A re-evaluation can take several weeks, or may wait for the next Core Update. If after 2 months you see no movement, either the improvement wasn't 'significant' enough, or other factors are blocking (low authority, high competition, negative user signals).

  • Rework 30% to 50% of the content at a minimum to reach the 'significant' threshold.
  • Optimize Core Web Vitals and loading speed.
  • Force the crawl via Search Console after making changes.
  • Track the crawl date and impressions in Search Console.
  • Wait for a Core Update if changes don't immediately reflect.
  • Don't change the URL without a strong strategic reason.
Google's re-evaluation of pages is real, but it requires substantial improvements and rigorous follow-up. The timing remains unpredictable, and the 'significant' threshold is undefined. These optimizations — content overhauls, technical diagnostics, crawl strategies — can be complex to orchestrate alone, especially on a medium or large site. Enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help you structure these projects, prioritize pages to be rewritten, and measure the real impact of improvements over time.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il attendre après une amélioration de page pour voir une réévaluation ?
Google ne donne aucun délai officiel. En pratique, comptez plusieurs semaines à quelques mois, souvent en lien avec une Core Update. Forcer le recrawl via Search Console peut accélérer le processus.
Vaut-il mieux créer une nouvelle URL ou améliorer une page existante qui performe mal ?
Mueller confirme que Google peut réévaluer une URL existante. Garder l'URL préserve l'ancienneté et les backlinks. Créer une nouvelle URL ne devrait se faire que si l'ancienne a un historique toxique irrémédiable.
Qu'est-ce qu'une amélioration « significative » selon Google ?
Google ne fournit aucun seuil chiffré. Sur le terrain, on observe qu'une refonte substantielle — 30 à 50 % de contenu refondu, amélioration technique visible — a plus de chances de déclencher une réévaluation.
Une page pénalisée manuellement peut-elle être réévaluée automatiquement ?
Non. Les pénalités manuelles nécessitent une demande de réexamen humaine. Les systèmes automatiques de réévaluation ne lèvent pas les sanctions manuelles.
Comment savoir si Google a effectivement recrawlé ma page après modification ?
Utilisez l'outil Inspection d'URL dans Search Console : il affiche la date de dernière exploration. Si cette date est postérieure à vos modifications, Google a bien recrawlé la page.
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