Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
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- 21:28 Can you really force Google to recrawl immediately after a price change?
- 40:33 Does font size really influence Google rankings?
- 40:33 Does CSS font size really impact your positions on Google?
- 70:28 Is it true that content concealed behind a Read More button is actually indexed by Google?
- 70:28 Is it true that content hidden behind a 'Read More' button is actually indexed by Google?
- 98:45 Does internal linking truly overshadow the sitemap in signaling your strategic pages to Google?
- 98:45 Is Internal Linking Really More Crucial Than a Sitemap for Prioritizing Your Pages?
- 111:39 Why Doesn't the Search Console API Show Referring URLs for 404 Errors?
- 144:15 Why does Google keep crawling 404 URLs that are years old?
- 182:01 Should you really be worried about having 30% of URLs as 404s on your site?
- 182:01 Can a high 404 rate really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 217:15 How can you effectively target multiple countries with a single domain without losing your local SEO?
- 217:15 Can you really target different countries on the same domain without using subdomains?
- 227:52 Should you really use hreflang when targeting multiple countries with the same language?
- 227:52 Should you really combine hreflang and geographical targeting in Search Console?
- 276:47 Why do your structured data breadcrumbs not show up in the SERPs?
- 285:28 Why do your rich results vanish from the standard SERPs while still appearing in site searches?
- 293:25 Do Invisible Breadcrumbs Really Block Your Rich Results on Google?
- 325:12 Should you really be optimizing JavaScript hydration for Googlebot in SSR?
- 347:05 Is it true that word count doesn't matter for ranking on Google?
- 347:05 Is the number of words really a ranking factor for Google?
- 400:17 Does the traffic volume of your site affect your Core Web Vitals score?
- 415:20 Does traffic volume really influence your Core Web Vitals?
- 420:26 Does content relevance truly outweigh Core Web Vitals in Google rankings?
- 422:01 Can Core Web Vitals Really Boost Your Ranking Without Relevant Content?
- 510:42 Is it true that Google can't always show the right local version of your site?
- 529:29 Is it really necessary to duplicate all country codes in hreflang for targeting multiple regions?
- 531:48 Why does hreflang in Latin America require each country code individually?
- 574:05 Does PageSpeed Insights really measure your site's performance?
- 598:16 Is it really possible to shift from long-tail to short-tail without changing strategy?
- 616:26 Can you really hide dates from Google search results?
- 635:21 Should you stop updating publication dates to boost your SEO?
- 649:38 Does Google really rewrite your titles to help you out?
- 688:58 Should you really report SERP bugs with generic queries to expect a response from Google?
- 870:33 Should new e-commerce sites prove their legitimacy outside of Google first?
- 937:08 Is it true that the length of the title really impacts Google rankings?
- 940:42 Is it true that the length of title tags really impacts Google's rankings?
Google rewrites title tags that it deems inadequate — particularly those stuffed with keywords or irrelevant — to enhance user comprehension. John Mueller states that there is no simple solution to block this rewriting if the original title is considered insufficient. In practical terms, your control over what appears in the SERP is more limited than one might think, and quality content takes precedence over sheer optimization.
What you need to understand
Why does Google rewrite title tags in the SERP?
Google has been modifying title tags displayed in its search results for years, but this practice has intensified. The stated goal: to make titles more understandable and relevant for the user scanning the results.
The engine specifically detects over-optimized titles (keyword stuffing), those that do not accurately reflect the content of the page, or even generic titles like "Home" or "Untitled". In these instances, Google pulls from other elements of the page — H1 tags, internal link anchors, or even visible text — to generate a title it deems more appropriate.
What types of titles are likely to be rewritten?
Repetitive keyword-stuffed titles ("Running shoes, sports shoes, marathon shoes Paris") are a prime target. Google sees them as manipulative and not very useful for the end user.
Overly vague or generic titles also suffer the same fate. A title like "Welcome" or "Product page" offers no information about the actual content — Google often replaces it with the H1 or a combination of textual elements. Too long titles (beyond 60-70 characters) get truncated, but they can also be completely rewritten if Google believes it can do better.
Is there a technical way to block this rewriting?
Mueller is clear: no, there is no simple solution. No meta tag, HTML attribute, or robots.txt directive can force Google to display exactly your title if the engine deems it inadequate.
The only viable approach is to write titles that align with Google’s expectations: relevant, descriptive, free from keyword stuffing, and accurately reflecting the page's content. If your title meets these criteria, the chances of it being displayed as is increase — though not with absolute certainty.
- Google rewrites titles to enhance user experience in the SERP
- Over-optimized or irrelevant titles are the most likely to be modified
- No technical tag can force the exact display of a title
- Crafting descriptive and natural titles remains the best defense
- Google draws from H1 tags, anchors, and visible content to generate its rewrites
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. Since the August 2021 update, SEOs have noticed a massive rewrite rate — some studies indicate that 60 to 80% of titles are modified in the SERP. This is not anecdotal; it’s structural.
On client sites, I’ve seen carefully crafted titles replaced by less optimized H1s or strange combinations drawn from the content. The issue: Google doesn’t always do better. Sometimes, the rewritten title is vaguer or less engaging than the original — but you have no recourse. [To be verified] whether Google applies this rewriting uniformly across all query types or if there are patterns based on verticals.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller states that there is "no simple solution", but there are still levers of influence. If your title is well-designed, aligns with the H1, and the content truly matches the promise of the title, Google usually leaves it alone.
The nuance is that Google doesn’t rewrite randomly. It follows detectable heuristics: excessive length, keyword repetition, mismatch between title and actual content. If you understand these signals, you significantly reduce the risk. But yes, even a perfect title can be impacted if Google believes that another element on the page better fits the search intent of the user.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
On very well-known brands, Google tends to respect branded titles more. An Apple or Nike page will undergo fewer rewrites than an unknown small e-commerce site — Google trusts reputation.
Similarly, for specific informational queries where the title directly answers the posed question, the rewriting rate drops. If your title perfectly matches the intent and the content fulfills it, Google has no reason to intervene. It’s on ambiguous, general, or over-optimized pages that the carnage occurs.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to limit rewrites concretely?
First priority: align title, H1, and content. If these three elements tell the same story, Google has no reason to look elsewhere. A title "Running shoes for marathons" should match a close H1 ("Complete guide to marathon running shoes") and content that indeed discusses that.
Next, ban keyword stuffing. A title with 4 variations of the same keyword is sure to be rewritten. It’s better to have a natural, engaging title that encourages clicks while being descriptive. Google values written quality — a well-written title is more likely to survive.
Finally, check the length of the title. Staying under 60 characters (about 600 pixels) ensures complete display on desktop and mobile. Beyond that, you risk truncation or a complete rewrite.
What errors should you absolutely avoid?
Never leave a title empty or generic. "Home", "Page", "Untitled" — Google systematically replaces them. Even an imperfect title is better than an absent one.
Avoid titles made up solely of the brand ("Nike") without context. Google finds them insufficient and pulls from the H1 or content. Adding a short description ("Nike — Innovative sports shoes") drastically improves the retention of the original title.
Do not duplicate titles across multiple pages. Google detects repetition and rewrites to differentiate. Each page must have its unique title, even if the pages are similar.
How can you check if your titles are displayed exactly as is in the SERP?
Use Google Search Console to monitor the CTR of your pages. A sudden drop can signal a recent rewrite that diminishes the attractiveness of the title. Compare your declared titles with what actually displays by conducting manual searches on your target keywords.
Tools like SEOmofo or Python scripts can extract the displayed titles in bulk and compare them to your HTML tags. If you detect a discrepancy, analyze why: length, repetitive keywords, mismatch with content?
- Align title, H1, and content around the same promise
- Write natural titles, free from keyword stuffing
- Respect the 60-character limit to avoid truncation
- Avoid generic or empty titles
- Differentiating each title to prevent duplication
- Regularly monitor actual display in SERP via Search Console
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on forcer Google à afficher exactement notre balise title ?
Quels sont les types de titles les plus susceptibles d'être réécrits ?
Si Google réécrit mon title, est-ce que cela pénalise mon classement ?
Comment savoir si mes titles sont affichés tels quels ou réécrits ?
Faut-il aligner strictement le title et le H1 pour éviter les réécritures ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 985h14 · published on 26/02/2021
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