Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 21:28 Les sitemaps suffisent-ils vraiment à déclencher un recrawl rapide de vos pages modifiées ?
- 21:28 Peut-on forcer Google à recrawler immédiatement après un changement de prix ?
- 40:33 La taille de police influence-t-elle réellement le classement Google ?
- 40:33 La taille de police CSS impacte-t-elle vraiment vos positions dans Google ?
- 70:28 Le contenu masqué derrière un bouton Read More est-il vraiment indexé par Google ?
- 70:28 Le contenu masqué derrière un bouton « Lire plus » est-il vraiment indexé par Google ?
- 98:45 Le maillage interne surpasse-t-il vraiment le sitemap pour signaler vos pages stratégiques à Google ?
- 98:45 Le maillage interne est-il vraiment plus décisif que le sitemap pour hiérarchiser vos pages ?
- 111:39 Pourquoi l'API Search Console ne remonte-t-elle pas les URLs référentes des 404 ?
- 144:15 Pourquoi Google continue-t-il à crawler des URLs 404 vieilles de plusieurs années ?
- 182:01 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter d'avoir 30% d'URLs en 404 sur son site ?
- 182:01 Un taux de 404 élevé peut-il vraiment pénaliser votre référencement ?
- 217:15 Comment cibler plusieurs pays avec un seul domaine sans perdre son référencement local ?
- 217:15 Peut-on vraiment cibler différents pays sur un même domaine sans passer par les sous-domaines ?
- 227:52 Faut-il vraiment combiner hreflang et ciblage géographique en Search Console ?
- 276:47 Pourquoi vos breadcrumbs en données structurées n'apparaissent-ils pas dans les SERP ?
- 285:28 Pourquoi vos rich results disparaissent dans les SERP classiques alors qu'ils s'affichent en recherche site: ?
- 293:25 Les breadcrumbs invisibles bloquent-ils vraiment vos rich results dans Google ?
- 325:12 Faut-il vraiment optimiser l'hydration JavaScript pour Googlebot en SSR ?
- 347:05 Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment inutile pour ranker sur Google ?
- 347:05 Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment un facteur de classement pour Google ?
- 400:17 Le volume de trafic de votre site impacte-t-il votre score Core Web Vitals ?
- 415:20 Le volume de trafic influence-t-il vraiment vos Core Web Vitals ?
- 420:26 Les Core Web Vitals comptent-ils vraiment dans le classement Google ?
- 422:01 Les Core Web Vitals peuvent-ils vraiment booster votre classement sans contenu pertinent ?
- 510:42 Pourquoi Google ne peut-il pas garantir l'affichage de la bonne version locale de votre site ?
- 529:29 Faut-il vraiment dupliquer tous les codes pays dans le hreflang pour cibler plusieurs régions ?
- 531:48 Pourquoi hreflang en Amérique latine impose-t-il tous les codes pays un par un ?
- 574:05 PageSpeed Insights mesure-t-il vraiment la performance de votre site ?
- 598:16 Peut-on vraiment passer du long-tail au short-tail sans changer de stratégie ?
- 616:26 Peut-on vraiment masquer les dates dans les résultats de recherche Google ?
- 635:21 Faut-il arrêter de mettre à jour les dates de publication pour améliorer son référencement ?
- 649:38 Google réécrit-il vraiment vos titres pour vous rendre service ?
- 650:37 Google réécrit vos balises title : peut-on vraiment l'en empêcher ?
- 688:58 Faut-il vraiment signaler les bugs SERP avec des requêtes génériques pour espérer une réponse de Google ?
- 870:33 Les nouveaux sites e-commerce doivent-ils d'abord prouver leur légitimité hors de Google ?
- 937:08 La longueur du title est-elle vraiment un facteur de classement sur Google ?
- 940:42 La longueur des balises title est-elle vraiment un critère de classement Google ?
Google explicitly recommends the use of hreflang even for content in the same language targeting different countries, in addition to geographic targeting in Search Console. This clarification dispels a common misunderstanding: hreflang is not just for multilingual sites, but also for multi-country sites with a common language. In practical terms, a website in English with US, UK, and AU versions should implement hreflang to avoid geographic targeting conflicts.
What you need to understand
Why is hreflang often misunderstood by practitioners?
The hreflang attribute is primarily associated with multilingual sites — French/English/Spanish — in the collective mindset. As a result, many SEO professionals overlook its use for geographic versions sharing the same language.
Mueller reminds us that hreflang is also meant to differentiate countries, even with linguistically identical content. An e-commerce site in English with a version for the UK, one for Australia, and one for the United States must declare these regional variants. Otherwise, Google might serve the wrong URL based on the user's geolocation.
What is the difference between hreflang and geographic targeting in Search Console?
The geographic targeting in Search Console (formerly known as International Targeting) allows you to set the target country for a whole domain or subdomain. It’s a global signal, but not sufficient to handle nearly identical content distributed across multiple URLs.
Hreflang, on the other hand, works at the level of each individual page. It tells Google: 'This URL serves the British audience; that one serves the American audience, even if the content is almost identical.' The two mechanisms are complementary, not interchangeable.
In what concrete cases does this recommendation apply?
Imagine an event ticketing site: ticketsuk.com for the UK, ticketsus.com for the United States. Same language, but tailored content (dates, currencies, local laws). Without hreflang, a British user might land on the US version in the results, and vice versa.
Another classic case: e-commerce sites with region-specific delivery. Amazon, Booking, Airbnb — all use hreflang to guide Google between their country versions. Same language, but different stocks, prices, terms and conditions. Hreflang ensures that each audience sees the correct URL in the SERPs.
- Hreflang is not just for multilingual sites — it also serves to differentiate geographic variants in the same language.
- The geographic targeting in Search Console sets a target country at the domain/subdomain level, whereas hreflang acts at the page level.
- The two mechanisms are complementary: hreflang refines the geographic signal provided by Search Console.
- Without hreflang, Google may serve the wrong regional variant in search results according to the user's geolocation.
- Content that is nearly identical between countries (same language but different currencies, laws, stocks) particularly benefits from hreflang.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, and it confirms what has been observed for years on high-authority international sites. Amazon, eBay, Booking — all implement hreflang between their country versions, even in English. It’s a de facto standard for players that have structured SEO teams.
On the other hand, on SME or mid-sized company sites, implementation remains incomplete or absent. Not due to ignorance of the rule, but because technical complexity and perceived ROI hinder implementation. A site with 3 country versions and 5,000 pages must maintain 15,000 hreflang declarations — which means that without automation, it’s unmanageable.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller talks about 'equivalent' content — but what constitutes truly equivalent content in Google's eyes? Is a product page with 90% identical text but a price in dollars vs. pounds equivalent? The official documentation does not provide a specific numerical threshold for similarity.
[To be verified] There is no public data specifying from what degree of differentiation (text, meta tags, structured data) Google considers two pages as non-equivalent and stops applying hreflang. Field experience suggests that a difference of 20-30% in textual content is enough to render hreflang irrelevant, but Google has never explicitly confirmed this.
Another point: Mueller says 'recommended', not 'mandatory'. In practice, if your site only has one or two country versions and geographic targeting in Search Console is well configured, the impact of not having hreflang remains limited. It becomes particularly critical with 3-4 regional variants.
In what cases does this rule not apply or become counterproductive?
If your content differs significantly between countries — let’s say, a corporate blog with local news specific to each market — hreflang is not necessary. Google will naturally consider these pages as distinct, not as regional alternatives.
Another case: hreflang implementation errors (loops, asymmetric declarations, incorrect language codes) are worse than a complete absence of hreflang. If you do not have the technical means to maintain clean declarations, it’s better to refrain and rely solely on geographic targeting in Search Console. A broken hreflang sends conflicting signals to Google and can degrade crawl.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely if you manage multiple country versions in the same language?
The first step: audit the architecture of your international site. Are you using ccTLDs (.fr, .uk, .us), subdomains (uk.site.com, us.site.com), or subdirectories (site.com/uk/, site.com/us/)? Each structure has its implications for geographic targeting and hreflang.
Then, implement hreflang consistently: either in HTML (link tags in the
), in HTTP headers, or via XML sitemaps. Not all three at the same time — choose one method and stick to it. For a site with several thousand pages, the XML sitemap is often the most maintainable.What mistakes should be avoided during multi-country hreflang implementation?
The classic mistake: forgetting the return tag declaration. If your UK page points to the US version in hreflang, the US version must point back to the UK. Google ignores asymmetric declarations. Always check for reciprocity.
Another pitfall: confusing language codes and country codes. To target the United States in English, use en-US, not just en. For the UK, use en-GB. A language code alone (e.g., en) indicates a generic version for all English speakers — rarely what you want.
Also pay attention to the x-default. This declaration serves as a fallback for users that don’t match any regional variant. If you have US, UK, and AU versions, declare an x-default pointing to a geographic selection page or your main version. Don’t leave this tag empty.
How can I check if my hreflang implementation is correct?
Use Google Search Console: the 'Coverage' and 'Enhancements' sections can highlight hreflang errors (missing declarations, incorrect codes). It's the first tool to consult.
For a more thorough audit, tools like Screaming Frog (with the hreflang feature) or online validators (Merkle hreflang validator) allow you to detect inconsistencies on a large scale. Make sure every URL declared in hreflang returns a status 200, not a redirect or a 404.
Finally, test in real conditions: simulate searches from different geolocations (VPN, tools like BrightLocal or SE Ranking) and verify that Google serves the correct regional variant in the SERPs. This is the ultimate field test.
- Audit the international architecture (ccTLDs, subdomains, subdirectories) and choose a hreflang implementation method (HTML, HTTP header or XML sitemap).
- Declare the correct language-country codes (
en-US,en-GB, etc.) and ensure reciprocity (return tags) among all variants. - Include an
x-defaulttag pointing to a geographic selection page or the main version of the site. - Check via Google Search Console that hreflang declarations do not generate errors (incorrect codes, missing URLs).
- Audit with Screaming Frog or an online validator to detect inconsistencies on a large scale (loops, asymmetries, error URLs).
- Test in real conditions from different geolocations to confirm that Google serves the correct regional variant in the SERPs.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Hreflang est-il obligatoire si j'utilise déjà le ciblage géographique dans Search Console ?
Dois-je utiliser hreflang entre des pages qui ne sont pas des traductions exactes ?
Quelle méthode d'implémentation hreflang choisir : HTML, HTTP header ou sitemap XML ?
Comment savoir si mes déclarations hreflang fonctionnent correctement ?
Que se passe-t-il si je fais une erreur dans mes déclarations hreflang ?
🎥 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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