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Official statement

Pagination using 'rel next' and 'rel prev' helps Google understand the pages of a site, but does not necessarily affect the number of indexed pages. The quality and structure of internal links are essential for indexing.
22:14
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h04 💬 EN 📅 09/05/2014 ✂ 25 statements
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Other statements from this video 24
  1. 3:13 404 ou 410 : quelle erreur HTTP choisir pour accélérer la désindexation d'une URL ?
  2. 5:13 Google supporte-t-il vraiment la directive crawl-delay dans robots.txt ?
  3. 5:17 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il la directive crawl-delay dans robots.txt ?
  4. 7:52 Comment écrire rel=nofollow sans risquer d'être ignoré par Google ?
  5. 8:54 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment l'indexation des URLs avec paramètres ?
  6. 9:12 La balise canonique évite-t-elle vraiment l'indexation des URLs à paramètres ?
  7. 11:44 Le texte incrusté dans les images est-il invisible pour Google ?
  8. 11:57 Pourquoi Google peine-t-il à lire le texte intégré dans vos images ?
  9. 15:17 Le fichier disavow agit-il vraiment au moment du crawl ou plus tard ?
  10. 15:17 Le cache Google révèle-t-il vraiment l'impact de vos backlinks désavoués ?
  11. 18:17 Google privilégie-t-il vraiment le desktop pour le classement des sites responsive ?
  12. 19:58 Faut-il vraiment pointer le mobile vers le desktop avec rel=canonical ?
  13. 20:25 Faut-il vraiment utiliser 'noindex' pour économiser des ressources de crawl ?
  14. 24:02 Pourquoi vos rich snippets disparaissent-ils du jour au lendemain ?
  15. 24:17 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il d'afficher vos rich snippets malgré un balisage Schema.org impeccable ?
  16. 28:09 Les communiqués de presse tuent-ils votre stratégie de backlinks ?
  17. 33:26 Faut-il vraiment noindexer toutes les pages de coupons sans offres actives ?
  18. 36:08 Le texte ALT des images influence-t-il vraiment l'indexation et le classement dans Google ?
  19. 37:21 Reformuler des articles de news suffit-il encore pour ranker sur Google ?
  20. 40:58 Faut-il vraiment attendre la prochaine mise à jour Penguin pour sortir d'une pénalité ?
  21. 49:00 Comment Google détecte-t-il qu'une requête nécessite l'affichage de Maps dans les résultats ?
  22. 52:29 Le désaveu de liens protège-t-il vraiment contre le netlinking négatif ?
  23. 56:37 Les mots-clés dans les URLs influencent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
  24. 62:16 Un site avec quelques pages uniques mais beaucoup de contenu dupliqué risque-t-il une pénalité globale ?
📅
Official statement from (12 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that rel next/prev tags help understand site structure but do not directly influence the indexing volume. What truly matters is the quality of internal linking and the architecture of links. In practice: stop relying on pagination to force indexing; focus instead on strong internal links and a clear structure.

What you need to understand

What does this statement mean for your paginated pages?

Mueller clarifies a widespread misunderstanding: the rel next and rel prev tags are not an indexing signal. Their role is limited to indicating to Google that a series of pages forms a logical set, a sequence. It is a structural hint, not a directive for inclusion in the index.

This distinction is crucial. Many SEOs thought that by correctly marking their pagination, they would guarantee the indexing of all pages in a series. False. Google can well understand your series AND decide to index only a fraction of the pages if they provide little added value or unique content.

Why doesn’t Google guarantee the indexing of all paginated pages?

The crawl budget is limited. If your pages 2, 3, 4... of an e-commerce category contain only minor variations of products already present on page 1, Google can legitimately choose not to index them. Pagination does not change this economic logic of crawling and indexing.

What Mueller emphasizes is that quality comes first. If your paginated pages provide fresh content, different products, relevant facets, then properly positioned internal links will do the job. The rel next/prev tag is merely a cosmetic addition.

What is the real leverage for indexing paginated pages?

The answer lies in two words: internal linking. If your pages 2, 3, 4 are accessible via clear links from page 1, from the menu, from related blocks, Google will discover them and assess them. No need for special tags to enforce indexing.

The architecture matters more than HTML annotations. A well-linked paginated page with distinct and valuable content will be indexed. An orphaned or nearly duplicated page will not be indexed, even with rel next/prev perfectly implemented. It’s a logic of link graph, not markup.

  • Rel next/prev informs about structure, not indexing
  • Internal linking remains the determining factor for discoverability
  • The content quality of each paginated page determines its inclusion in the index
  • Google can understand your pagination and refuse to index certain pages if they are redundant
  • Optimizing internal link architecture is more cost-effective than multiplying technical tags

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, overall. On large e-commerce sites, we regularly observe that pages 5, 6, 7+ of a category are never indexed, even with technically perfect pagination. Google prefers to concentrate its crawl on pages with high added value. It makes sense.

However, Mueller remains vague on one point: at what level of redundancy does Google decide not to index? There is no number, no metric. It’s case by case, depending on crawl budget and domain authority. [To verify] according to your vertical and link profile.

What nuances should be added to this rule?

The statement implies that rel next/prev is optional. This is true for indexing, but it remains useful for ranking consolidation. Some tests show that Google can better distribute internal PageRank when pagination is clearly indicated. This is not an indexing factor, but it can influence crawl prioritization.

Another nuance: Mueller speaks of “the quality of internal links.” What does that concretely mean? Relevant anchors? Follow links? Reduced click depth? Google never details these criteria, so each SEO must test and iterate. The formula is intentionally vague.

When does this rule not apply?

On high authority sites (media, pure players), Google often indexes nearly all paginated pages, even with repetitive content. The crawl budget is more generous, trust is there. For them, whether rel next/prev is present or not, indexing is almost automatic. Mueller's rule mainly applies to average or newer sites.

Note: if you remove your rel next/prev tags from a site already well-indexed, monitor Search Console for 2-3 months. Some sites have experienced temporary crawl fluctuations after removal. Google relearns the structure, and that takes time.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do with your paginated pages?

First, stop focusing on technical tags. Concentrate on internal linking: each paginated page should be accessible in less than 3 clicks from the home page. Use contextual links in your content, not just the “Next Page” buttons.

Next, audit the added value of each page. If your page 8 of a category contains only out-of-stock products or duplicates of page 2, it's better to properly deindex it (noindex) rather than let Google judge it. Control the narrative.

What mistakes should be avoided regarding pagination?

Do not multiply competing pagination systems (buttons + load more + infinite filters). Google gets confused, and your crawl budget explodes. Choose one logic and stick to it. Ideally: classic pagination with follow links.

Another common mistake: blocking paginated pages in robots.txt or canonicalizing them to page 1. If you want them to be indexed, leave them crawlable and self-referentially canonicalized. The rel next/prev can coexist with self-referential canonicals, which is even recommended.

How to check if your pagination is well managed?

Use Search Console: go to Coverage > Excluded, filter by URLs containing “?page=” or “/page/”. If you see hundreds of pages in “Detected, currently not indexed,” it means Google crawls them but deems them non-prioritized. Either improve their content or apply noindex.

Conduct a Screaming Frog crawl in Spider mode, limiting to 5 levels deep. See how many paginated pages are discovered. If they are at depth 4-5, it’s too far: add internal links from strategic hubs. The goal: maximum depth of 2-3 for the pages you want indexed.

  • Audit internal linking to your paginated pages (click depth, anchors, follow/nofollow)
  • Identify paginated pages with low added value and apply noindex if necessary
  • Check in Search Console the indexing status of your pages ?page= or /page/X
  • Consolidate the pagination structure: one system, clean URLs, self-referential canonicals
  • Test the gradual removal of rel next/prev on a sample and measure the impact over 60 days
  • Strengthen contextual links from your editorial content to key paginated pages
Summary: pagination is not a tool for forced indexing. The real leverage is a strong internal linking and distinct content on each page. Rel next/prev remains useful for structural readability but never replaces a good link architecture. These optimizations require a fine analysis of your crawl budget, link profile, and indexing metrics. If you lack the time or tools to conduct this in-depth audit, consulting a specialized SEO agency can save you months and secure your technical decisions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je supprimer mes balises rel next/prev si elles n'affectent pas l'indexation ?
Non, gardez-les si elles sont déjà en place. Elles aident Google à comprendre la structure logique de vos séries de pages, même si elles ne forcent pas l'indexation. Supprimer peut créer de la confusion temporaire.
Pourquoi certaines de mes pages paginées ne sont-elles jamais indexées ?
Google les juge probablement redondantes ou de faible valeur. Si elles sont trop similaires à la page 1 ou contiennent peu de contenu unique, Google préfère économiser son crawl budget. Améliorez leur contenu ou appliquez un noindex.
Le maillage interne suffit-il vraiment pour indexer toutes mes pages paginées ?
Oui, si chaque page est accessible en moins de 3 clics et contient du contenu distinct. Mais Google peut toujours choisir de ne pas indexer si le contenu est jugé redondant. Qualité avant quantité.
Puis-je utiliser une canonical vers page 1 pour toute ma pagination ?
Non, c'est une erreur. Si vous voulez que vos pages 2, 3, 4 soient indexées, elles doivent avoir une canonical auto-référencée. Canonicaliser vers page 1 dit à Google de les ignorer.
Quelle est la profondeur de clic maximale acceptable pour une page paginée ?
Idéalement 2-3 clics depuis la home. Au-delà de 4 clics, le crawl devient aléatoire et l'indexation improbable, surtout sur les sites à crawl budget limité. Renforcez vos liens internes.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Links & Backlinks Pagination & Structure

🎥 From the same video 24

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h04 · published on 09/05/2014

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