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Official statement

For Google to correctly recognize language variants, each page must link to the exact corresponding version in the other language (FR article → equivalent EN article), not to that language's homepage. This 1:1 bidirectional link allows Google to group the variants and serve the correct version based on the user's language/region.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 52:29 💬 EN 📅 14/05/2020 ✂ 39 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google requires a 1:1 bidirectional link between language variants: each page must link to its exact counterpart in the other language, never to a generic homepage. Without this precise matching, Google cannot group the versions correctly and will serve the wrong language based on region. This mapping error costs positions in international markets.

What you need to understand

What exactly is a bidirectional hreflang 1:1 link?

The principle is simple in theory: if your article www.site.com/fr/guide-seo declares www.site.com/en/seo-guide as the English variant, then www.site.com/en/seo-guide MUST link back to www.site.com/fr/guide-seo. Not to /fr/ or /fr/guides/, but to the exact URL.

This bidirectionality allows Google to confirm the link between the two contents. Without reciprocity, the algorithm sees inconsistency and may ignore your hreflang annotations. The mapping then becomes useless.

Why do so many sites link to the homepage instead of the exact equivalent?

The reason often lies in an incomplete product logic. Not all articles are translated simultaneously — some markets prioritize specific content. As a result, instead of leaving a page without hreflang, they link to /en/ “by default.”

This is exactly what should not be done. Google cannot guess that your FR guide corresponds to an EN guide that does not yet exist. If the equivalent doesn't exist, do not declare a hreflang tag for that language on this page. It's as simple as that.

How does Google actually group language variants?

The algorithm scans the hreflang tags of all declared URLs and looks for coherent clusters. If page A points to page B, page B to page A, and page C to A and B with reciprocity, Google forms a group.

As soon as a link is broken or unilateral, the group fragments. Google could then serve the FR version to an English-speaking user, or worse: consider the pages as competing duplicate content and cannibalize their ranking potential.

  • The link must be bidirectional: FR → EN AND EN → FR
  • It must point to the exact equivalent URL, never to a generic page
  • If a version does not exist in a given language, do not declare that language in hreflang
  • Google groups variants into coherent clusters — a broken link fragments the cluster
  • Without correct grouping, there is a risk of duplication and cross-language cannibalization

SEO Expert opinion

Is this rule consistent with what's observed in practice?

Absolutely. Audits of multilingual sites systematically reveal hreflang mapping errors: FR pages pointing to /en/, orphaned ES versions, unilateral links. And in 90% of cases, this correlates with ranking issues in the affected markets.

The point that Mueller doesn’t elaborate on: Google's tolerance for partial errors. If 80% of your pages have a correct hreflang and 20% point incorrectly, does Google apply grouping to the 80% or ignore the whole cluster? [To be verified] — the official documentation remains vague on this.

What are the hidden pitfalls of this implementation?

The main pitfall: long-term maintenance. A site launching a DE version with 50 translated articles establishes the 1:1 mapping. Six months later, 200 new FR articles are published, but only 30 are translated into DE. Result: 170 FR pages without an equivalent, and often someone decides to point to /de/ “to avoid losing traffic.”

Fatal error. It’s better to not declare a hreflang DE on those 170 pages and accept that they will only be visible in FR. Google will serve the FR version to Germans if it’s the best result, period.

Be careful: E-commerce CMSs often generate automatic hreflang based on the directory structure (/fr/, /en/), without checking the actual existence of the equivalent. Audit your templates before deploying.

Should you declare hreflang on similar but not strictly equivalent pages?

No. If your FR SEO guide contains 3000 words and your EN version 1200 words with a different angle, they are not equivalents. Google may interpret them as competing content rather than variants.

The rule of thumb: if a French-speaking user lands on the EN version, will they be frustrated not to find the same content? If yes, do not declare a hreflang link between those two pages. It’s better to let them compete independently in their respective markets.

Practical impact and recommendations

How to audit your current hreflang implementation?

First reflex: Screaming Frog with the Hreflang tab enabled. Crawl your site, export the annotations, and check for inconsistencies: pages linking to URLs that do not link back, links to 404s, patterns /fr/ → /en/ without a specific URL.

Then, Google Search Console, International Coverage section. Google reports detected hreflang errors: conflicting tags, missing languages, incomplete clusters. These errors are often underestimated while they significantly impact cross-border ranking.

What to do when a translation doesn’t exist yet?

Simple: do not declare that language in the hreflang tags of that page. If /fr/article-123 has no EN equivalent, your tag should only point to itself with hreflang="fr" and possibly x-default.

Do not give in to the temptation to link to /en/ or /en/homepage/ “in the meantime.” This breaks the mapping, confuses Google, and you lose ranking. A clean absence is better than a faulty link.

How to manage the migration or redesign of a multilingual site?

301 redirects must be mapped language by language. Old FR URL → new FR URL, old EN URL → new EN URL. And above all, rebuild the complete hreflang graph on the new URLs before switching.

Too many redesigns break hreflang for weeks because the redirects all point to /fr/ by default. Result: traffic drop across all non-French-speaking markets. Test in staging with a crawler before pushing to production.

  • Crawl your site with Screaming Frog and check the bidirectionality of every hreflang pair
  • Monitor Google Search Console, International Coverage section, for reported errors
  • Never link to a homepage or generic category — only to the exact equivalent
  • If a translation does not exist, do not declare that language in hreflang for that page
  • During a migration, map redirects language by language and rebuild the hreflang graph before switching
  • Regularly audit new content to prevent mapping drift over time
Establishing a robust and maintainable hreflang setup is complex, especially on sites with thousands of continually growing pages. Mapping errors cost positions in strategic markets. If your team lacks the resources or expertise to audit and address these issues at scale, support from an SEO agency specialized in international SEO can save you months of lost traffic and accelerate your cross-border expansion.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Peut-on utiliser hreflang si toutes les langues ne sont pas traduites sur toutes les pages ?
Oui, mais chaque page doit uniquement déclarer les langues pour lesquelles un équivalent existe réellement. Si une page FR n'a pas de version EN, ne pas inclure hreflang="en" sur cette page.
Que se passe-t-il si une page pointe vers une autre en hreflang mais que la réciproque est absente ?
Google considère le lien comme incohérent et peut ignorer l'annotation hreflang. Le groupement des variantes échoue, et chaque version risque de concurrencer l'autre au lieu de se compléter.
Faut-il déclarer hreflang dans le HTML, le sitemap XML, ou les deux ?
Les deux méthodes fonctionnent, mais Google recommande de choisir une seule approche pour éviter les conflits. Le HTML est plus fiable si bien implémenté ; le sitemap XML simplifie la gestion sur de gros volumes.
Hreflang x-default doit-il pointer vers quelle langue exactement ?
Vers la version par défaut que vous voulez servir aux utilisateurs dont la langue ne correspond à aucune variante déclarée. Souvent /en/ ou une page de sélection de langue, jamais une homepage générique sans choix.
Comment tester que mon implémentation hreflang fonctionne avant de déployer ?
Utilisez l'outil de test d'URL de Google Search Console, crawlez avec Screaming Frog, et vérifiez manuellement quelques paires de pages. Assurez-vous que chaque lien est bidirectionnel et pointe vers l'URL exacte.
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