Official statement
Other statements from this video 17 ▾
- 1:48 Pourquoi Google galère-t-il à indexer vos nouveaux contenus rapidement ?
- 2:10 Le texte d'ancrage est-il vraiment important pour le référencement ?
- 4:17 Changer de TLD impacte-t-il vraiment votre visibilité organique ?
- 5:46 Faut-il simplifier l'architecture internationale de votre site pour améliorer son SEO ?
- 8:01 Un domaine au passé douteux peut-il vraiment retrouver la confiance de Google ?
- 10:06 Le texte alt des images booste-t-il vraiment votre SEO ?
- 10:59 L'indexation mobile-first s'applique-t-elle vraiment à tous les critères de ranking, y compris above-the-fold ?
- 11:38 Google peut-il ignorer votre balisage logo pour le Knowledge Graph ?
- 13:18 Les interstitiels de sélection linguistique bloquent-ils vraiment le crawl de Google ?
- 15:55 Google utilise-t-il les scores d'organismes externes pour évaluer la réputation d'un site ?
- 16:26 Peut-on réutiliser les mêmes avis clients sur plusieurs pages sans pénalité SEO ?
- 18:25 L'indexation mobile-first peut-elle enterrer vos pages produits mal liées ?
- 21:33 Peut-on vraiment paginer différemment entre mobile et desktop sans risque SEO ?
- 37:31 Les erreurs 503 peuvent-elles vraiment faire disparaître votre site de Google ?
- 38:58 Les carrousels du Knowledge Graph influencent-ils vraiment votre classement SEO ?
- 40:41 Faut-il vraiment rediriger une ancienne catégorie vers une seule des nouvelles URLs ?
- 43:12 Le contenu dupliqué interne pénalise-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
Google claims that there is no limit to the number of H tags per page and that its flexibility regarding title hierarchy is complete. This statement contradicts traditional recommendations of having only one H1 per page. Practically, this means you can organize your content based on your editorial logic without fearing penalties, but it doesn't exempt you from maintaining a coherent semantic hierarchy for UX and accessibility.
What you need to understand
Does Google really care about your title structure?
John Mueller's statement raises a fundamental question: if Google is flexible with title tags, why has the SEO community insisted for 15 years on recommending a single H1 per page? The answer is simple: confusion between technical requirement and good editorial practice.
Google treats H tags as semantic signals, not strict rules. Its algorithm aims to understand the logical structure of the content, regardless of how many H1s there are. If you have three H1s on a page because your template requires it, Google will not penalize you for that.
What does this flexibility actually mean?
Google's flexibility means that the algorithm adapts to real web practices. Millions of sites use multiple H1s without issues, especially those built with modern frameworks like React or Vue.js that sometimes generate unconventional HTML structures.
But beware: flexibility does not mean chaos. Google still prioritizes a clear semantic hierarchy. If your H2 tags come before your H1, or if your H4s contain your main keywords while your H1s talk about something else, you are sending mixed signals.
Why does this statement bother traditional SEOs?
This position from Google challenges a deeply held belief: that of perfect control over on-page optimization. For years, SEO audits have pointed to pages with multiple H1s as critical errors. This statement invalidates thousands of hours of work based on a strict interpretation of HTML5 specs.
The real challenge lies elsewhere: if Google does not sanction imperfect structures, what should we focus on instead? The answer probably lies in overall semantic coherence rather than strict adherence to a technical norm.
- Google imposes no limit on the number of H tags per page
- The flexibility concerns structure, not semantic relevance
- A logical hierarchy remains essential for UX and accessibility
- Modern frameworks often generate unconventional structures without negative impact
- The coherence of content takes precedence over HTML formalism
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes and no. On one hand, we actually see that sites with multiple H1s rank perfectly in the SERPs. A/B tests conducted on hundreds of pages show that changing from 1 to 3 H1s generally has no measurable impact on rankings, as long as the content remains coherent.
On the other hand, it is observed that Google struggles with pages whose hierarchy is completely chaotic. A page that mixes H1, H3, H2, H5 in disorder risks having its featured snippets poorly extracted or its title tags rewritten counterproductively. This isn’t a penalty, but a loss of semantic crawl efficiency.
What nuances should we add to this displayed flexibility?
The major nuance concerns the intention behind the structure. If you have 5 H1s because your CMS is poorly configured, Google will manage. If you have 5 H1s because you are trying to spam different keywords, that’s another story. [To be verified]: Google has never published data on the actual impact of keyword stuffing in modern H tags.
Another point: this flexibility applies to classic content pages, but probably not to very sensitive pages like e-commerce category pages or high-stakes landing pages. On these pages, having a single perfectly optimized H1 remains a critical baseline to maximize the chances of capturing the right intent.
In what cases does this rule not really apply?
The first case: web accessibility. Screen readers and assistive tools rely on the hierarchy of titles to navigate. A chaotic structure makes your content inaccessible to people with disabilities. Google will not penalize you, but it is an ethical and legal issue (RGAA, WCAG).
The second case: rich snippets and featured snippets. Google often extracts its snippets based on the H structure. If your H2s do not logically correspond to your H1s, you reduce your chances of appearing in position zero. Again, there’s no direct penalty, but a loss of visibility opportunity.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do with your H tags?
Stop wasting time counting your H1s. Focus on editorial coherence: each title should provide clear information about the section it introduces. If your page covers three distinct topics and you want three H1s, go ahead. Google will handle it.
However, ensure that your hierarchy remains logical. An H2 should come from an H1, and an H3 from an H2. There’s no need for pixel-perfect precision, but avoid jumping from H1 to H4 without reason. Tools like Screaming Frog or SEMrush can help you spot glaring inconsistencies.
What mistakes should you avoid despite this flexibility?
The first mistake: confusing flexibility with negligence. Just because Google tolerates imperfect structures doesn’t mean you should stop structuring. A page without any H tags, or only H5s, remains a signal of editorial weakness.
The second mistake: keyword stuffing in the H tags. If you have 8 H2s that all contain exactly the same target query, you cross the line between optimization and over-optimization. Google still doesn’t like that, even if it no longer automatically punishes it.
How can you verify that your structure is effective?
Use Google Search Console to monitor pages whose title tags are rewritten. If Google massively rewrites your titles, it often signals that your title structure is confusing or irrelevant. This is an indirect yet reliable indicator.
Also test your pages with accessibility tools like WAVE or axe DevTools. If title navigation is chaotic for a visually impaired user, it likely is for Google as well. A good H hierarchy improves UX, which indirectly boosts SEO through behavioral signals.
- Check the logical coherence of the H hierarchy (H1 → H2 → H3) without obsessing over numbers
- Ensure that each title accurately reflects the content of its section
- Avoid exact repetition of the same keywords in all H tags
- Test title navigation with a screen reader or an accessibility tool
- Monitor title tag rewrites in the Search Console as an indicator of semantic confusion
- Prioritize editorial clarity over strict technical optimization
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de balises H1 maximum peut-on mettre sur une page ?
Est-ce que plusieurs H1 diluent le poids SEO de la page ?
Faut-il absolument respecter l'ordre H1 puis H2 puis H3 ?
Les balises H influencent-elles encore le ranking en 2025 ?
Que faire si mon CMS génère automatiquement plusieurs H1 ?
🎥 From the same video 17
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 13/11/2018
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