Official statement
Other statements from this video 41 ▾
- 3:48 Does Google really automatically ignore irrelevant URL parameters?
- 3:48 Why does Google ignore certain URL parameters and how does it choose its canonical version?
- 4:34 Does Google really ignore non-essential URL parameters on your site?
- 8:48 Are errors 405 and soft 404 truly handled the same way by Google?
- 8:48 Do soft 404s really trigger deindexing without a penalty?
- 10:08 Should you really prefer a soft 404 over a 405 error for removed Flash content?
- 17:06 Does submitting multiple Google reconsideration requests really speed up the review of your site?
- 18:07 Do manual actions for unnatural outbound links really affect a site's ranking?
- 18:08 Do penalties on outbound links really impact your site's ranking?
- 18:08 Should you really set all your outbound links to nofollow to protect your SEO?
- 19:42 Should you really set all your outbound links to nofollow to protect your PageRank?
- 22:23 Does Google always show your images in search results?
- 22:23 How does Google decide which images to display in search results?
- 23:58 How long does it take to recover traffic after a 301 redirect bug?
- 23:58 Can temporary technical bugs really sink your Google ranking for good?
- 24:04 Can a bug restoring your old URLs kill your SEO?
- 24:08 Why does Google aggressively recrawl your site after a migration?
- 27:47 Should you index a new URL before redirecting an old one in a 301?
- 28:18 Is it really necessary to wait for indexing before redirecting a URL in 301?
- 34:02 Why does the mobile-friendly test produce conflicting results on the same page?
- 37:14 Why should WebPageTest be your go-to tool for web performance diagnostics?
- 37:54 Are H1 titles really essential for ranking your pages?
- 39:58 Is it true that structured data makes a difference based on whether it's implemented with a plugin or manually?
- 39:58 Should you manually code your structured data or opt for a WordPress plugin?
- 41:04 Should you really be worried about a 503 error on your site for a few hours?
- 41:04 Can a 503 error truly harm your site's SEO?
- 43:15 Why are your FAQ rich snippets disappearing despite technically valid markup?
- 43:15 Why are your rich results disappearing from regular SERPs while they technically work?
- 43:15 Why do your rich snippets vanish even when your markup is technically correct?
- 47:02 Why does Search Console show indexed URLs that are missing from the sitemap?
- 48:04 Should you really modify the lastmod of the sitemap to speed up recrawling after fixing missing tags?
- 48:04 Should you modify the lastmod date in the sitemap after simply correcting a meta title or description?
- 50:43 Is it normal for the Rich Results report in Search Console to remain empty despite valid markup?
- 50:43 Why is Google showing fewer of your FAQs as rich results?
- 50:43 Is it true that your validated FAQ markup might be invisible in Search Console?
- 51:17 Why is Google showing fewer FAQs in rich results now?
- 54:21 Why does Google choose a canonical URL in the wrong language for your multilingual content?
- 54:21 Does Googlebot really ignore your multilingual site's accept-language header?
- 54:21 Can Google really tell the difference between your multilingual pages, or is it at risk of mistakenly canonicalizing them?
- 57:01 Is Google really tolerant of hreflang errors that mismatch language and content?
- 57:14 Does Googlebot really send an accept-language header during crawling?
Google confirms that heading tags (H1, H2, etc.) are a strong ranking signal, but not exclusive. A page can rank for terms present only in H2, not in H1. The content hierarchy is more important than the precise level of the tag: a well-placed H5 is better than a poorly used H1, especially for image indexing.
What you need to understand
Why does Google downplay the importance of heading levels?
John Mueller's statement breaks a long-standing misconception: the strict hierarchy H1 > H2 > H3 is not dogma for Google. The search engine analyzes the overall structure signal rather than the exact level of each tag.
In practice? If your content uses an H5 to structure an important subsection, Google will understand its contextual role. The algorithm does not penalize a page for skipping a level or reversing two headings. What matters is the overall semantic coherence.
How can a page rank for a term absent from H1?
Mueller states clearly: a keyword present only in H2 may be sufficient to position a page. This confirms that Google weighs all on-page signals — body text, internal anchors, alt tags, structured metadata.
The H1 tag remains a strong signal, but it does not overshadow the rest. If your H1 targets a broad angle and your H2s detail specific sub-themes, each subtitle becomes a potential entry point for long-tail queries.
What is the true function of headings for Google?
Heading tags primarily serve to understand the hierarchy of content. Google uses them to segment the page into thematic blocks, identify main sections, and — crucially — index images within their context.
When an image follows an H2, Google associates the content of that heading with the image to refine its ranking in Google Images. That’s where structure becomes really crucial: an orphaned image, without a close contextual heading, loses relevance signal.
- Hierarchy matters more than the exact level — a poorly placed H1 is less valuable than a coherent H3 within its context.
- Headings are a strong signal but not the only one — body text, internal anchors, and metadata also count.
- A keyword in H2 can be enough to rank a page — no need to concentrate everything in H1.
- Images inherit the semantic context of preceding headings — crucial for Google Images.
- Google tolerates structural imperfections as long as the overall logic remains clear.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, and it’s refreshing. A/B tests have shown for years that optimizing an H1 without touching the rest of the page rarely leads to measurable gains. In contrast, restructuring all headings to better segment themes often boosts long-tail traffic.
Let’s be honest: this statement doesn’t mean H1s are useless. It reframes their role. A well-chosen H1 remains a signal of immediate relevance, especially on competitive queries. But stuffing an H1 with keywords while neglecting H2-H3 is a tactical error.
What nuances should be made to avoid overinterpretation?
Mueller says the level of the tag doesn’t matter, not that headings have no importance. Vital nuance. If you publish a page with zero heading tags, you deny Google a structure signal — and that weighs heavily.
A second nuance: the phrase "especially for images" deserves attention. Google uses the near textual context of images for indexing. An H2 heading just before an image enriches its semantic signal. [To be verified] — public data on the exact impact remains scarce, but field observations confirm that well-contextualized images rank better in Google Images.
In what cases might this rule not fully apply?
On ultra-competitive sites (finance, healthcare, law), every micro-signal counts. A perfectly aligned H1 with search intent can move a page from position 4 to 1. In this context, the margin for error is zero.
Another edge case: short mono-thematic pages (e.g., product landing pages). When all content fits in 200 words, the H1 becomes mechanically more decisive — there are fewer other signals to compensate. And that’s where it gets tricky: Mueller talks about an "overall hierarchy signal," but a page without a true hierarchy has little to signal.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely with this information?
Stop over-optimizing your H1 at the expense of the rest. If you spend two hours perfecting an H1 and zero minutes on your H2-H3, you are missing the point. The real opportunity lies in complete structuring: each section should have a title that captures a specific search intent.
Second immediate action: audit your images. For each important visual, check that a heading (H2 or H3) precedes it in the DOM. This textual context nourishes Google Images — and it’s often an underutilized lever, especially on e-commerce or visual editorial sites.
What mistakes must absolutely be avoided after this statement?
First mistake: concluding that H1s are useless. They remain a strong signal, especially for a page’s immediate relevance to a primary query. What Mueller says is that they are not enough on their own.
Second mistake: neglecting hierarchical coherence under the pretext that the exact level doesn’t matter. A site where H2s are used for legal mentions and H5s for major section titles sends a confusing signal. Google will understand, but you will have degraded user experience and semantic clarity.
How can you check that your heading structure is optimal?
Crawl your site using Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Export all heading tags and check three points: (1) coherence of the hierarchy (no H4 without a parent H3), (2) presence of at least one title per important section, (3) density of strategic keywords distributed across H1, H2, and H3.
Then, test manually: display your page in outline mode (browser extension or dev feature). If a user can understand your content simply by reading the headings, you have succeeded. Otherwise, your headings are too vague or poorly distributed.
- Structure each page with at least 3-4 levels of headings (H1, H2, H3) reflecting a true thematic hierarchy.
- Place a heading (H2 or H3) just before each important image to enrich its semantic context.
- Distribute strategic keywords across H1, H2, and H3 — don’t concentrate everything on H1.
- Avoid illogical level jumps (H1 > H5 directly) that muddle the structural signal.
- Crawl the site regularly to detect hierarchy inconsistencies and correct them.
- Test readability: a user should be able to grasp the page outline by reading only the headings.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une page sans H1 peut-elle quand même ranker ?
Faut-il éviter d'avoir plusieurs H1 sur une même page ?
Les mots-clés en H2 ont-ils autant de poids qu'en H1 ?
Comment Google utilise-t-il les titres pour indexer les images ?
Peut-on ignorer la hiérarchie stricte H1 > H2 > H3 sans risque ?
🎥 From the same video 41
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 11/08/2020
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