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Official statement

HTTPS was a quality and trust signal for ranking, but as more and more sites adopt it by default, its weight as an indicator of care and quality has diminished in ranking systems.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 22/08/2023 ✂ 15 statements
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Other statements from this video 14
  1. Google utilise-t-il vraiment un seul algorithme pour classer les sites ?
  2. Pourquoi Google distingue-t-il désormais systèmes de classement et mises à jour ?
  3. Faut-il vraiment tout refaire après chaque mise à jour Google ?
  4. Google centralise-t-il enfin la documentation de ses systèmes de classement ?
  5. Faut-il vraiment attendre qu'un système Google impacte votre trafic avant d'agir ?
  6. Google multiplie-t-il vraiment les mises à jour ou communique-t-il simplement mieux ?
  7. Google va-t-il enfin documenter tous ses systèmes de classement ?
  8. Google limite-t-il vraiment à deux pages par domaine dans ses résultats de recherche ?
  9. Faut-il abandonner la checklist technique et miser uniquement sur l'expérience utilisateur ?
  10. La Page Experience est-elle devenue trop complexe pour être optimisée signal par signal ?
  11. Les directives techniques de Google sont-elles vraiment binaires et vérifiables ?
  12. Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment sans importance pour le classement Google ?
  13. Faut-il vraiment afficher un auteur sur toutes vos pages web ?
  14. Le contenu authentique pour audience réelle est-il vraiment la clé du SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (2 years ago)
TL;DR

Martin Splitt confirms that HTTPS carries less weight as a ranking signal than it used to. Why? Because it's become universally adopted: when everyone implements it by default, it no longer differentiates well-maintained sites from others. The implication: Google has had to rebalance its criteria elsewhere.

What you need to understand

Why is Google reducing the weight of HTTPS in its algorithm?

Since its introduction as a ranking factor in 2014, HTTPS has functioned as a trust marker. A site running HTTPS signaled an effort to secure user data — therefore, by extension, a certain level of seriousness.

Except that — and this is where it gets tricky — virtually every website is now switching to HTTPS by default. Hosting providers offer free SSL certificates (Let's Encrypt), CMSs activate it automatically, and browsers display aggressive warnings for any HTTP site. Result: the signal becomes binary and universal. It no longer distinguishes anything.

What does this change concretely for SEO?

Google adjusts the weight of its signals based on their ability to discriminate quality. If 95% of sites have HTTPS, the algorithm can no longer use it to set apart two equivalent pages. It becomes a hygiene criterion, not a competitive advantage.

This doesn't mean HTTPS disappears from the equation — it remains a factor in user experience (padlock display, trust) and probably a binary criterion (present or absent). But its relative boosting power erodes mechanically.

What other signals have experienced the same fate?

This dilution phenomenon isn't new. Google has already experienced it with other criteria: mobile compatibility (mobile-friendly) lost its differentiating weight when almost all sites became responsive. Same dynamic.

  • HTTPS becomes a minimum prerequisite, not a differentiation lever
  • Google rebalances its criteria toward less universal and more qualitative signals
  • The absence of HTTPS probably remains penalizing, but its presence no longer boosts as much
  • This logic applies to all technical signals that become generalized (AMP, Core Web Vitals eventually?)

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, absolutely. For several years now, we've observed that switching a site from HTTP to HTTPS no longer generates the same ranking gains it did in 2015-2016. A/B tests show near-neutral impacts on SERPs for sites already well-optimized otherwise.

What Splitt confirms here is a mechanism that all practitioners have suspected: a generalized signal mechanically loses its differentiating power. This is a logic of standard algorithmic adjustment, not a strategic reversal by Google.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First point: Google isn't saying HTTPS no longer matters at all. It's saying its relative weight has decreased. Critical distinction. A pure HTTP site still suffers disadvantages (browser warnings, user mistrust, risk of indirect penalty).

Second point: this statement lacks sectoral granularity. [To be verified] — does this dilution apply uniformly across all sectors? Probably not. In e-commerce or finance, HTTPS remains a critical trust signal, even if it no longer boosts rankings. User perception and conversion rate, meanwhile, remain impacted.

Caution: Don't confuse decreased algorithmic weight with HTTPS being useless. The absence of HTTPS remains a dealbreaker for UX, legal (GDPR), and reputation reasons.

What does this statement reveal about Google's strategy?

It reveals a logic of continuous adaptation: Google never freezes its criteria. As soon as a signal becomes trivial, it loses its predictive value. The algorithm then migrates toward finer indicators — probably toward behavioral signals, content quality, Core Web Vitals in specific contexts.

Let's be honest: this communication is also Google's way of saying "stop asking us if HTTPS still boosts rankings." The implicit answer: it depends, but overall less than before.

Practical impact and recommendations

Should you still migrate to HTTPS if you haven't already?

Yes, without hesitation. Even if the pure SEO boost is diluted, the absence of HTTPS puts you at a structural disadvantage: dissuasive browser warnings, inability to use certain modern APIs (geolocation, push notifications), risk of blocking by corporate proxies, approximate GDPR compliance.

HTTPS is no longer a lever for SEO differentiation, but it remains a condition of entry to the game. It's like asking if a car needs wheels: technically yes, even if that doesn't make it faster than others.

What strategic adjustments should you make?

Stop counting on HTTPS as a competitive ranking factor. Redirect your efforts toward criteria that still retain differentiating power: editorial quality, depth of subject coverage, E-E-A-T signals, advanced user experience (smooth navigation, loading time optimized beyond Core Web Vitals thresholds).

Concretely? If you're torn between fine-tuning your HTTPS (upgrading from TLS 1.2 to 1.3, optimizing certificate chain) or investing in expert quality content, choose content. The SEO return on investment is no longer comparable.

  • Ensure your HTTPS is active, correctly configured (301 redirects HTTP → HTTPS), and declared in Search Console
  • Verify the absence of mixed content errors that would degrade user experience
  • Stop relying on HTTPS alone to gain positions — it no longer compensates for structural weaknesses
  • Reallocate your SEO budget toward high-impact differentiating levers: content, UX, contextualized Core Web Vitals
  • Monitor emerging signals Google values (contextual freshness, structured entities, topical authority)
HTTPS remains essential for technical, legal, and UX reasons — but don't fool yourself about its SEO boosting power anymore. It's an entry ticket, not an accelerator. If your site requires in-depth technical overhaul or strategic reorientation to stay competitive in the face of these algorithmic shifts, consulting a specialized SEO agency can help you identify precisely where to reinvest your budget for measurable impact. Field expertise helps you avoid wasting time on optimizations that have become marginal.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le HTTPS a-t-il encore un impact sur le SEO en 2025 ?
Oui, mais très atténué. Il reste un facteur de classement, mais son poids a diminué avec sa généralisation. L'absence de HTTPS pénalise encore (alertes navigateur, méfiance utilisateur), mais sa présence ne booste presque plus les positions. C'est devenu un prérequis minimal, pas un avantage compétitif.
Dois-je quand même migrer mon site HTTP vers HTTPS ?
Absolument. Même si le gain SEO direct est faible, l'absence de HTTPS te met en désavantage UX, sécurité, conformité RGPD, et compatibilité avec certaines fonctionnalités web modernes. C'est une obligation stratégique, pas un choix.
Pourquoi Google réduit-il le poids du HTTPS comme signal de classement ?
Parce qu'il est devenu universel. Quand 95% des sites l'adoptent, il ne différencie plus la qualité. Google ajuste mécaniquement ses critères vers des signaux plus fins et moins trivialisés.
Quels signaux SEO ont encore un réel pouvoir différenciateur aujourd'hui ?
La qualité et la profondeur du contenu, les signaux E-E-A-T, l'expérience utilisateur avancée, les Core Web Vitals dans certains contextes, et la topical authority. Tous les critères qui nécessitent un vrai investissement éditorial ou technique.
Le HTTPS est-il devenu totalement inutile pour le SEO ?
Non. Il reste un facteur — mais binaire : présent ou absent. L'absence pénalise, la présence ne booste presque plus. C'est une condition nécessaire mais non suffisante, comme avoir un sitemap XML correct.
🏷 Related Topics
HTTPS & Security AI & SEO

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 22/08/2023

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