Official statement
Other statements from this video 32 ▾
- 0:36 Comment vérifier si un domaine a des problèmes SEO invisibles depuis Google Search Console ?
- 1:48 Peut-on vraiment détecter les pénalités algorithmiques cachées d'un domaine expiré ?
- 3:50 Comment gérer le contenu dupliqué quand on gère plusieurs entités distinctes ?
- 4:25 Faut-il dupliquer son contenu pour chaque établissement local ou tout regrouper sur une page ?
- 6:18 Pourquoi les suppressions DMCA massives peuvent-elles détruire le classement d'un site entier ?
- 6:18 Les retraits DMCA massifs peuvent-ils vraiment dégrader le classement d'un site ?
- 7:18 Faut-il privilégier un sous-domaine ou un sous-répertoire pour héberger vos pages AMP ?
- 7:22 Où héberger vos pages AMP : sous-domaine, sous-répertoire ou paramètre ?
- 8:25 La balise canonical fonctionne-t-elle vraiment si les pages sont différentes ?
- 8:35 Faut-il vraiment bannir le rel=canonical de vos pages paginées ?
- 10:04 Le scraping peut-il vraiment détruire le référencement d'un site à faible autorité ?
- 11:23 L'adresse IP du serveur influence-t-elle encore le référencement local ?
- 11:45 L'adresse IP de votre serveur impacte-t-elle encore votre SEO local ?
- 13:39 Les images cliquables sans balise <a> sont-elles vraiment invisibles pour Google ?
- 13:39 Un lien sans balise <a> peut-il transmettre du PageRank ?
- 15:11 Comment Google indexe-t-il vraiment vos pages AMP en présence d'un noindex ?
- 15:13 Le noindex d'une page HTML bloque-t-il vraiment l'indexation de sa version AMP associée ?
- 18:25 Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer d'une action manuelle Google ?
- 21:59 Faut-il intégrer des mots-clés dans son nom de domaine pour mieux ranker ?
- 22:43 Faut-il vraiment indexer son fichier robots.txt dans Google ?
- 24:08 Pourquoi le cache Google affiche-t-il votre page différemment du rendu réel ?
- 25:29 DMCA et disavow : pourquoi Google privilégie-t-il l'une sur l'autre pour gérer contenu dupliqué et backlinks toxiques ?
- 28:19 Le taux de crawl influence-t-il vraiment le classement dans Google ?
- 28:19 Votre serveur limite-t-il le crawl de Google plus que vous ne le pensez ?
- 31:00 Les signaux sociaux sont-ils vraiment inutiles pour le référencement Google ?
- 31:25 Les profils sociaux améliorent-ils le classement Google ?
- 32:03 Les profils sociaux multiples boostent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
- 33:00 Les répertoires de liens sont-ils vraiment ignorés par Google ?
- 33:25 Les liens d'annuaires sont-ils vraiment tous ignorés par Google ?
- 36:14 Faut-il activer HSTS immédiatement lors d'une migration de domaine vers HTTPS ?
- 42:35 Pourquoi les étoiles d'avis mettent-elles autant de temps à apparaître dans Google ?
- 52:00 Le niveau de stock influence-t-il vraiment le classement de vos fiches produits ?
A manual action that has completely deindexed a site requires a full reindexing once lifted, a process that spans several weeks according to Google. Returning to SERPs is never immediate, even after the reported issue is fixed. Anticipating this unavoidable delay in any post-penalty recovery strategy is crucial for managing client expectations and allocated resources.
What you need to understand
What is a manual action resulting in total deindexing?
A complete manual action represents the most severe penalty a site can face: its total removal from the Google index. Unlike partial penalties that simply degrade ranking, this measure literally erases your site from search results.
This type of sanction typically targets sites with serious and systematic violations: outright spam, extensive cloaking, large-scale artificial link networks, industrially stolen content. Google does not take this decision lightly as it involves a manual review by a quality rater.
Why does recovery take several weeks?
Removing the manual action in Search Console does not trigger a magical restoration. It simply allows Google to reindex your site, without any special priority. Your URLs must go through the entire standard process: crawl, quality assessment, indexing, ranking.
The timeframe depends on multiple technical factors. The crawl frequency of your site prior to the penalty plays a significant role: a site that is rarely crawled will naturally take longer than one that is crawled daily. The site's size also matters, along with your ability to effectively submit URLs via the sitemap.
Is this delay unavoidable, or can it be accelerated?
Let’s be clear: you will never force Google to reindex your site in 48 hours. The process remains largely beyond your direct control. Mueller’s statement confirms a structural constraint of the system, not an arbitrary timeline that could be negotiated.
However, certain actions can optimize this timing. Submitting a clean XML sitemap immediately after the lifting, fixing all technical issues that slow down crawling, focusing Googlebot on your strategic pages via the URL inspection tool for a few key URLs. But even in the best-case scenario, expect a minimum of three to six weeks.
- Total deindexing: the most serious penalty, completely erases the site from the Google index
- Lifting of the manual action: does not automatically restore the site, only allows for reindexing
- Recovery timeframe: several unavoidable weeks for full reindexing
- Reindexing process: gradual crawling, quality assessment, indexing without special priority
- Factors influencing the delay: historical crawl frequency, site size, technical quality post-correction
SEO Expert opinion
Does this estimated timeframe match real-world observations?
Experience largely confirms Mueller's statement. Cases of recovery from total manual actions I have followed typically span four to eight weeks on average. Few sites become fully operational again before three weeks, even after exemplary corrections.
A crucial point that Mueller does not clarify: returning to the index does not mean returning to initial positions. You will first regain degraded positions and then gradually improve if quality meets standards. I have seen sites take three months to recover 80% of their organic traffic from before the penalty, and some never fully recovered.
Which variables significantly affect this timeframe?
The responsiveness in correction makes all the difference. A site that takes two months to clean up its problems and then requests reconsideration will inherently extend its recovery timeline. Conversely, a site that fixes everything before even receiving the official notification saves time.
The nature of the initial problem also plays a role. A site penalized for automated spam must sustainably prove that it has changed: Google closely monitors repeat offenders. A site penalized for an occasional technical issue (such as an inadvertently misconfigured cloaking) generally recovers faster. [To be verified] Google has never officially confirmed that it applies a variable trust coefficient based on the domain’s history.
Are there cases where recovery takes even longer?
Absolutely. Very large sites (+100,000 URLs) can easily exceed two months. I have followed a case with 450,000 indexed pages that required nearly three months for a 90% reindexing. The crawl budget then becomes the main bottleneck.
Domains with a loaded history (multiple prior manual actions, stacked algorithmic penalties) also seem to lag more. Google clearly does not grant the same processing speed to a first-time offender as to a notorious repeat offender. It is difficult to precisely quantify this difference, but the pattern holds true across enough cases to be noteworthy.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do immediately after receiving a total manual action?
Panicking is pointless; methodically analyze everything. Identify precisely the cause mentioned in Search Console, document it thoroughly, map the extent of the issue across the entire site. Too many SEOs superficially fix the sample page cited by Google without addressing the systemic root.
At the same time, anticipate business crisis management. An e-commerce site losing 100% of its SEO traffic for at least six weeks must activate compensatory levers: temporary paid search budget, intensified email campaigns, social media operations. Informing your management that recovery will take at least a month prevents toxic unrealistic expectations.
How can you optimize the reindexing process once the action is lifted?
Submit a flawless XML sitemap containing only the corrected and accessible URLs. Remove anything that is noindex, 404, or blocked by robots.txt. Google prioritizes crawling what is explicitly marked as important in a freshly updated sitemap.
Use the URL inspection tool on your strategic pages to force their individual recrawl. Focus on the homepage, main categories, and high-value content. You have a limited quota; spend it wisely on the URLs that historically generate the most qualified traffic.
What mistakes unnecessarily prolong the recovery period?
Requesting reconsideration when the problem is not fully corrected remains the number one mistake. Each rejected reconsideration mechanically extends the total delay and increases Google's distrust of your domain. One well-prepared request is better than three hasty ones.
Massively altering the site’s architecture during the recovery period is another common blunder. You add unnecessary complexity to an already heavy process. Google needs to relearn your site: make it easier for them by maintaining a stable structure, at least during the first six weeks post-lifting.
- Thoroughly correct the root cause before any reconsideration request
- Submit a clean and updated XML sitemap immediately after lifting
- Use URL inspection on strategic pages to accelerate their recrawl
- Maintain a stable architecture during the reindexing phase
- Daily monitor the evolution of the number of indexed pages via Search Console
- Anticipate a minimum delay of four to six weeks before significant traffic return
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une action manuelle peut-elle être levée en moins de 48 heures après la demande de reconsidération ?
Faut-il supprimer et recréer le site dans la Search Console après une action manuelle totale ?
Le crawl budget influence-t-il directement la vitesse de récupération ?
Peut-on perdre définitivement ses positions même après levée de l'action manuelle ?
Les backlinks acquis avant la pénalité restent-ils pris en compte après la récupération ?
🎥 From the same video 32
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 27/07/2018
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