Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 1:04 Google classe-t-il vraiment les contenus d'actualité différemment des autres résultats ?
- 2:07 Les mises à jour mobile de Google affectent-elles vraiment votre positionnement ?
- 4:16 Faut-il vraiment limiter ses pages à une seule balise H1 ?
- 5:13 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il les balises canonical de la version mobile ?
- 15:16 Faut-il vraiment supprimer la balise priorité de vos sitemaps XML ?
- 18:36 Pourquoi Google indexe-t-il des URLs non-canoniques même avec une balise canonical correcte ?
- 22:09 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les domaines en contenu dupliqué ?
- 25:48 Le paramètre changefreq du sitemap sert-il vraiment à quelque chose pour Google ?
- 28:49 Hreflang distingue-t-il vraiment les variantes régionales quand le contenu est identique ?
- 31:30 Pourquoi la stabilité des URLs d'images impacte-t-elle directement votre visibilité dans Google Images ?
- 33:35 Google ignore-t-il vraiment le texte incrusté dans vos images ?
- 36:57 Faut-il vraiment enregistrer la version HTTPS dans Search Console après une migration ?
- 38:17 Faut-il vraiment corriger les erreurs d'exploration dans la Search Console ?
- 45:27 Les liens sur images sans alt text sont-ils vraiment compris par Google ?
Google confirms that shortening your URLs does not directly improve your ranking in search results. The benefits are limited to practicality: easier sharing, simpler memorization, and higher click-through rates in certain contexts. Focus your efforts on the logical structure and readability of your URLs rather than their absolute length.
What you need to understand
Why does Google clarify the length of URLs?
Google addresses a persistent SEO myth: many practitioners still believe that a short URL mechanically achieves a better ranking. This belief likely stems from a confusion between correlation and causation. Pages that rank well often have short URLs, but it is rarely the length that explains their success.
The search engine distinguishes between direct ranking factors (which influence the algorithm) and indirect benefits (which enhance user experience). URL length falls into the latter category. A URL with 50 characters will not have an algorithmic advantage over one with 150 characters, all else being equal.
What does “no direct impact on ranking” actually mean?
This means that no explicit ranking signal penalizes or rewards the raw length of a URL. Google parses and indexes your URLs regardless of their size, within reasonable limits. The crawler does not stop at 100 characters; it can technically handle URLs of several thousand characters.
But be careful: “no direct impact” does not mean “no consequences”. An unreadable URL, packed with unnecessary parameters or session IDs, can create crawling issues, content duplication, or dilution of signal. It is these indirect consequences that affect your SEO, not the length itself.
Where does URL length play a practical role?
Google mentions sharing and copying. This is pragmatic: a 60-character URL fits in a tweet, a text, or an email without being truncated. It's easier to memorize and inspires more trust than a long string of incomprehensible parameters.
In mobile SERPs, a short, readable URL can improve perceived click-through rates. Users visually scan results: a clean URL enhances the legitimacy of the page. However, this gain remains marginal and indirect. There is no algorithmic boost, just an UX impact that can, in certain contexts, influence CTR and thus, in turn, behavioral signals.
- URL length is not a direct ranking factor in the Google algorithm.
- A short URL facilitates sharing, memorization, and user trust, but does not directly influence positioning.
- SEO issues related to long URLs stem from their structure, duplication, or parameters, not from their length per se.
- Prioritize a clear and readable architecture over an obsession with character count.
- Google can technically crawl and index very long URLs, but this complicates technical site management.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Yes, largely. A/B tests conducted on thousands of pages show that no significant correlation exists between the raw length of a URL and its ranking, given equivalent content and backlinks. I've seen 180-character URLs dominate competitive SERPs, while 40-character URLs stagnate on page 3.
The problem arises when length is confused with structure. A short URL often results from thoughtful architecture: few directory levels, no unnecessary parameters, optimized slugs. It is these structural choices that aid SEO, not brevity itself. Google does not say otherwise, but the nuance escapes many practitioners.
What are the real practical implications of a long URL?
The first risk is technical duplication. Long URLs often contain tracking, session, or filtering parameters that generate multiple versions of the same page. If your robots.txt and canonicals are not in order, you dilute the internal PageRank and complicate crawling.
The second is human readability. A clear URL helps users understand where they are going, which improves CTR in SERPs and reduces bounce rates. Google picks up on these behavioral signals, and indirectly, you gain points. But again, it's not the length that matters, it's the semantic clarity.
When should you still shorten your URLs?
When your URLs contain unnecessary stopwords (de, le, la, pour) or outdated dates that freeze the content in time. When they include dynamic session IDs that create duplication. When they exceed the technical limits of certain analytics tools or CMS (some truncate beyond 255 characters).
In practical terms? If your URL is 90 characters but clean, well-structured, and readable, leave it as is. If it is 60 characters but contains three UTM parameters and a session ID, correct it. The criteria is not size, but technical and semantic cleanliness. [To be verified]: Google has never published an exact threshold where a URL becomes “too long,” leaving ample room for interpretation.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you audit and shorten all your existing URLs?
No. Shortening URLs that already work would create massive 301 redirects, with a risk of temporary ranking loss and SEO juice dilution. It is only worth the effort if your URLs present actual technical issues: duplication, ineffective crawling, excessive parameterization.
Focus on new pages and site redesigns. This is where you can build a clean architecture from the start, without the costs of migration. For existing URLs, only intervene on those that generate duplicate content or crawling errors identified in Search Console.
How can you build optimized URLs without obsessing over length?
Prioritize a flat structure: fewer directory levels, more clarity. Use descriptive but concise slugs, including the main keyword without fluff. Avoid stopwords unless they are essential for understanding (“seo-agency-paris” rather than “natural-search-agency-based-in-paris”).
Banish unnecessary parameters: session IDs, internal tracking, empty filters. If you must use parameters (pagination, e-commerce filters), manage them properly with canonicals and rules in Search Console. A well-structured 120-character URL is better than an unreadable 50-character one.
What tools should you use to diagnose your URLs?
Search Console remains your best ally: analyze indexed URLs, spot duplicates, identify redirect chains. Screaming Frog allows you to audit the overall structure: crawl depth, URL length, presence of parameters. Google Analytics reveals URLs with an abnormal bounce rate, a potential sign of UX issues.
For e-commerce sites or those with high volume, automated monitoring through tools like OnCrawl or Botify detects architectural drift before it impacts crawl budget. However, these analyses are complex to implement and interpret: consulting a specialized SEO agency can save you valuable time and avoid costly mistakes in optimizing your URL architecture.
- Do not shorten your existing URLs unless there is a proven technical issue.
- For new content, build short URLs by structure, not by arbitrary truncation.
- Include the main keyword in the slug, without fluff or unnecessary stopwords.
- Eliminate unnecessary parameters and manage necessary ones properly (canonicals, Search Console rules).
- Regularly audit your URLs through Search Console and Screaming Frog to detect duplication and redirect chains.
- Prioritize a flat architecture: fewer directory levels, better readability.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle est la longueur maximale d'URL que Google peut indexer ?
Une URL courte améliore-t-elle mon taux de clic dans les SERP ?
Dois-je supprimer les stopwords de mes URLs pour les raccourcir ?
Raccourcir mes URLs existantes via des redirections 301 est-il risqué ?
Les URLs courtes réduisent-elles le crawl budget consommé ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 48 min · published on 19/05/2016
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