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Official statement

Return and payment policy pages are important for user transparency, but their visibility in search results depends on specific searches and their perceived relevance.
53:09
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:14 💬 EN 📅 01/05/2019 ✂ 12 statements
Watch on YouTube (53:09) →
Other statements from this video 11
  1. 1:38 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
  2. 14:30 Pourquoi Google continue-t-il d'afficher les anciennes URLs de pages d'attente d'image malgré les redirections ?
  3. 16:12 Les mots-clés dans l'URL ont-ils vraiment encore un impact sur votre ranking ?
  4. 19:59 HTTPS ralentit-il vraiment le crawl de Googlebot sur votre site ?
  5. 23:31 Les liens sociaux en nofollow influencent-ils réellement le ranking Google ?
  6. 28:26 Votre contenu mobile est-il vraiment complet ou sabotez-vous votre classement desktop sans le savoir ?
  7. 34:25 Les backlinks anciens perdent-ils vraiment de la valeur avec le temps ?
  8. 41:00 Votre site subit-il un crawl excessif qui révèle des failles structurelles ?
  9. 47:27 Comment Google choisit-il entre homepage et page interne dans les résultats de recherche ?
  10. 49:37 Faut-il encore créer des sitemaps vidéo pour indexer ses contenus multimédias ?
  11. 54:08 Les commentaires sur une page influencent-ils vraiment le classement dans Google ?
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Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that return and payment policy pages should only appear in search results for specific queries where they are relevant. Their primary role remains user transparency, not SEO visibility. This implies thinking about a differentiated indexing strategy based on the nature of these pages and their actual value to users who find them through organic search.

What you need to understand

Why does Google care about these administrative pages?

The return and payment policy pages are part of what are called utility or legal pages on an e-commerce site. Google recognizes their importance for transparency and user trust — criteria that play a role in the E-E-A-T evaluation.

The search engine does not say to hide them. It states that their visibility in the SERPs depends on specific searches. In other words: if someone is looking for "Zalando return policy", that page should be able to appear. If no one is searching for it, there’s no reason for it to clutter the active index or dilute the crawl budget.

What does "perceived relevance" mean in this context?

The term "perceived relevance" is intentionally vague. Google evaluates a page's relevance for a given query based on search intent, the content of the page, and its authority.

For a return policy page, relevance depends on the search volume around this topic for your brand, the level of detail in the content, and the ability to answer a real user question. A generic page copied from a template will have zero relevance. A detailed, unique page with clear terms and concrete examples can become a useful resource.

Does Google explicitly state not to index these pages?

No. The statement contains no technical directives such as noindex or canonical. Mueller simply describes the behavior of the engine: these pages appear only if they are relevant for a specific search.

It’s up to you to decide whether to force their indexing or leave them openly accessible without actively promoting them in internal linking. The nuance is important: accessible does not necessarily mean indexed, and indexed does not necessarily mean visible.

  • User transparency: these pages must remain accessible and clear, regardless of their indexing strategy.
  • SEO relevance: only pages that meet a real search intent justify active optimization.
  • Crawl budget: on large sites, each unnecessarily indexed page consumes resources that Google could allocate elsewhere.
  • Search volume: check if queries like "return policy [brand]" exist before deciding on an indexing strategy.
  • Content uniqueness: a page copied from a template adds no SEO value and dilutes the overall quality of the site.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices?

Yes, and it's even a constant. Utility pages — terms and conditions, legal notices, various policies — rarely appear in competitive SERPs unless they are searched by their exact name or URL.

What Mueller doesn't mention is that these pages can play an indirect role in SEO: they contribute to the site's trust perception, are crawled and assessed as part of E-E-A-T, and can generate positive behavioral signals if users consult them before buying. [To be verified]: the direct impact on ranking remains hard to measure, but the indirect impact through user trust is documented in the Quality Rater Guidelines.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First nuance: brand size changes everything. If you are Amazon, your return policy pages can generate thousands of monthly searches. If you launch a Shopify store, no one will ever search for them. The indexing strategy must adapt.

Second nuance: the content of the page determines its relevance. A detailed return policy page, with use cases, examples, and clear language, can rank for informational queries like "how to return an item bought online". A generic page will never rank, no matter your internal linking strategy.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If your return policy is a differentiating selling point — free returns for 365 days, for example — then this page becomes fully-fledged marketing content. It deserves to be optimized, promoted, and integrated into your content strategy.

Similarly, if you are in a sector where payment terms are a buying criterion (B2B, luxury products, expensive equipment), a detailed and optimized payment policy page can capture qualified traffic and reassure prospects in the decision-making phase.

Caution: do not confuse "user-friendly pages" with "SEO-friendly pages". The former should always exist and be accessible. The latter should only be optimized if they meet a measurable search intent.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do with these pages?

First step: audit the search volume around your policies. Use Google Search Console to see if these pages are receiving impressions or clicks. If so, for which queries? If the numbers are close to zero, there’s no need to force their visibility.

Second step: evaluate content quality. A return policy page copied from a legal template is useless for SEO. Rewrite it with clear language, concrete examples, answers to frequently asked questions. A unique and useful page can become a referenced resource.

What mistakes should be avoided in managing these pages?

Do not put them in noindex by default without consideration. If your brand is known, users may search for "return policy [brand]". By blocking indexing, you force them to navigate your site, generating unnecessary friction.

Do not over-optimize them either. Stuffing a payment policy page with generic keywords like "best online payment method" is counterproductive. Google detects over-optimization, and especially, this page has no chance of ranking against real editorial content.

How can you verify that the strategy is appropriate?

Use Search Console to monitor impressions, clicks, and positions of these pages. If they generate qualified traffic, optimize them. If they never appear, keep them accessible but don’t waste SEO resources on them.

Also check the internal linking. These pages should be accessible in 2-3 clicks from the homepage, ideally in the footer or a dedicated section. However, there’s no need to push them into the main menu or link from every product page.

  • Analyze search volume for "return policy [brand]" and "payment terms [brand]" in your SEO tool
  • Check in Search Console if these pages receive organic impressions or clicks
  • Rewrite content to ensure it is unique, clear, and answers real user questions
  • Keep these pages accessible in 2-3 clicks via the footer or a dedicated legal section
  • Do not block indexing unless crawl budget is a proven issue on your site
  • Monitor behavioral metrics: if users consult these pages before buying, it’s a positive signal
Return and payment policy pages play a trust role more than a direct SEO role. Their optimization is justified only if they meet a measurable search intent. Otherwise, keep them accessible, unique, and clear — without wasting crawl budget or optimization time. For complex e-commerce sites or brands with high search volume, the strategy may require specialized support: an SEO agency can help you balance indexing, content, and prioritization of resources based on your real business objectives.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Faut-il mettre en noindex les pages de politique de retour ?
Pas systématiquement. Si votre marque génère des recherches spécifiques sur ces politiques, laissez-les indexables. En revanche, sur un petit site ou une marque inconnue, le noindex peut être justifié pour préserver le crawl budget.
Ces pages comptent-elles dans l'évaluation E-E-A-T ?
Oui, indirectement. Les Quality Rater Guidelines mentionnent la transparence sur les conditions de vente et de retour comme un critère de confiance. Une page claire et détaillée renforce la perception de fiabilité du site.
Peut-on optimiser une page de politique de retour pour ranker sur des requêtes génériques ?
C'est techniquement possible si le contenu est très détaillé et répond à une intention informationnelle large, mais en pratique, ces pages perdront face à du contenu éditorial dédié. Mieux vaut créer un article de blog sur le sujet.
Quelle longueur minimum pour qu'une page de politique soit considérée comme utile ?
Il n'y a pas de seuil magique. L'important est la clarté et l'exhaustivité. Une page de 300 mots bien structurée, avec exemples et FAQ, vaut mieux qu'un pavé juridique de 2000 mots illisible.
Faut-il linker ces pages depuis les fiches produits ?
Non, sauf si c'est pertinent pour l'utilisateur. Un lien dans le footer suffit généralement. Linker chaque fiche produit vers la politique de retour dilue le maillage interne sans gain utilisateur.
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