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Official statement

Hreflang tags allow you to indicate to Google the different language versions of your pages. This process involves several steps: we must first crawl and index the different versions of a page, understand the network of pages linked via hreflang, and this can take two to three times longer than the indexing of a single page. There is no preference for Swiss content or any other.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 59:49 💬 EN 📅 08/02/2019 ✂ 10 statements
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Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that indexing pages with hreflang takes two to three times longer than that of a standalone page. The reason? The search engine must first crawl and index each language variant, then understand the network of links among them. For multilingual or multi-regional sites, this means anticipating significantly longer indexing delays and adjusting your crawl priorities accordingly.

What you need to understand

Why does Google need more time to process hreflang tags?

The indexing process with hreflang imposes a multiplicative workload on Google. Unlike a single page, the engine must crawl all declared language versions before it can confirm the coherence of the network.

Specifically, if you have a page in French, English, German, and Spanish, Google cannot simply validate the French version in isolation. It must crawl all four URLs, check that each one properly declares the other three as alternatives, and ensure that there are no conflicts or inconsistencies in the assignments.

What does Mueller mean by 'linked page network'?

Each hreflang tag creates a bidirectional relationship between pages. If your FR page points to EN, DE, ES, those three pages must in turn point to FR and to each other. Google must validate this complete reciprocity to correctly apply geographic and linguistic targeting.

This is where indexing time explodes. On a site with 10 languages and 1,000 pages per language, Google must crawl and cross-reference 10,000 URLs to confirm the network. Every error — a missing tag, a dead URL, an inconsistency — forces the engine to recrawl for verification.

Does this delay apply to all types of international sites?

Yes, but the impact varies according to architecture and the cleanliness of the implementation. A site with five languages properly structured will experience less delay than a site with fifteen languages and reciprocity errors in the tags.

Mueller specifies that there is no preferential treatment for Swiss content or any other. In other words, Google does not favor certain language-country combinations. The two to three times delay applies universally, whether you are targeting Switzerland, French Canada, or Latin America.

  • Indexing with hreflang requires prior crawling of all declared language variants
  • Google must check the bidirectional coherence of tags among all pages in the network
  • The indexing delay is multiplied by 2 to 3 compared to a standalone page
  • No geographic or linguistic preference is applied in processing
  • Reciprocity errors or dead URLs further prolong the delay

SEO Expert opinion

Is this delay estimate consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, and it is often even optimistic. On e-commerce sites with twenty languages and thousands of SKUs, delays of four to six weeks are regularly observed before Google stabilizes the indexing of variants. The limiting factor is not just processing time, but also the crawl budget allocated to the site.

Mueller does not specify a crucial point: if your site has a tight crawl budget, Google will prioritize already indexed pages or those deemed important. The new language variants go to the back of the line. The result? The "two to three times longer" easily becomes five times longer on medium-sized sites with limited authority.

What common errors amplify this delay?

The most common: redirect loops or URL changes after implementing tags. If you deploy hreflang on a FR page and then change its URL without updating the tags of the other variants, Google must recrawl the entire network to validate the new structure. [To be verified]: it's unclear if Google uses any caching to speed up revalidation in this case.

Another trap: hreflang tags in the sitemap pointing to pages not yet crawled. Google can detect tags via the sitemap, but if the target page hasn't been crawled, the network remains incomplete. The engine then waits for all URLs to be discovered, which can take weeks if your internal linking is weak.

When should hreflang use be reconsidered?

If you have a site with little differentiation between language versions — for example, a blog with five languages but little international traffic — it may not be worth the trouble. The cost in indexing time and technical complexity may outweigh the benefits, especially if your crawl budget is limited.

Let’s be honest: hreflang is relevant when you have significant organic traffic in multiple languages and the risk of duplication or poor geographic targeting is real. For a site generating 95% of its traffic in French, implementing hreflang for three other marginal languages is often a waste of resources. Focus first on the clean indexing of your primary language.

Warning: On sites with a tight crawl budget, adding hreflang without first optimizing crawl depth and internal linking can delay the indexing of your main pages. Prioritize structure before internationalization.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you reduce the impact of indexing delay with hreflang?

First step: validate reciprocity of tags before deployment. Use tools like Screaming Frog or Sitebulb to crawl your site and check that each page points correctly to all its variants, and vice versa. A single error in the network forces Google to recrawl everything.

Next, submit a separate XML sitemap for each language with integrated hreflang tags. This speeds up the discovery of variants and helps Google understand the overall structure more quickly. Combine this with strong internal linking among language versions — don’t rely solely on technical tags.

Should certain languages be prioritized during initial deployment?

Absolutely. If you are launching a multilingual site, start with two or three main languages with clean hreflang tags, wait for Google to correctly index this network, and then gradually add other variants. Deploying fifteen languages at once on a site with a limited crawl budget guarantees a disastrous indexing delay.

Also monitor server logs to identify which URLs Google prioritizes for crawling. If you notice that it explores your secondary language variants little, strengthen their internal linking or add links from your main pages to those versions. Internal signals matter as much as technical tags.

What technical errors block indexing with hreflang?

Contradictory canonical URLs are a classic. If your FR page states a canonical to itself but also a hreflang tag to EN, and the EN page states a canonical to FR, Google abandons the network. Ensure that each variant has a self-referential canonical.

Another mistake: incorrect language or region codes. Using "en-uk" instead of "en-gb" or "fr-ch" for generic French content breaks recognition. Google is strict about ISO 639-1 language codes and ISO 3166-1 Alpha 2 region codes. Verify each code before deployment.

  • Validate the reciprocity of hreflang tags with a crawler before deployment
  • Submit a separate XML sitemap for each language with integrated hreflang tags
  • Deploy language variants gradually, not all at once
  • Ensure every page has a self-referential canonical consistent with hreflang
  • Monitor server logs to identify under-crawled languages
  • Strengthen internal linking among language versions
Implementing hreflang demands absolute technical precision and a fine understanding of Google’s crawling mechanisms. Indexing delays multiplied by two or three are non-negotiable — they are part of the process. Anticipate them in your deployment schedules and don’t expect to see all your language variants indexed within a week. If your multilingual site has dozens of languages, thousands of pages, or a history of technical errors, these optimizations can quickly become complex. In such cases, the assistance of a specialized SEO agency in internationalization can save you several months by avoiding costly mistakes and structuring the deployment in a gradual and controlled manner.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les balises hreflang ralentissent-elles réellement l'indexation de toutes mes pages ?
Oui, Google doit crawler et valider l'ensemble du réseau de pages liées avant de confirmer l'indexation. Cela multiplie par deux à trois le délai comparé à une page isolée, voire plus si le crawl budget est serré ou si des erreurs de réciprocité existent.
Est-ce que soumettre un sitemap avec hreflang accélère le processus ?
Oui, cela aide Google à découvrir plus rapidement les variantes linguistiques et à comprendre la structure globale. Mais le moteur doit quand même crawler chaque URL pour valider la cohérence des balises — le sitemap ne remplace pas l'exploration.
Faut-il implémenter hreflang même pour des langues avec peu de trafic ?
Pas nécessairement. Si une langue génère un trafic marginal, le coût en temps d'indexation et en complexité technique peut dépasser le bénéfice. Concentrez-vous d'abord sur les langues principales avec un volume organique significatif.
Que se passe-t-il si une balise hreflang pointe vers une URL morte ou redirigée ?
Google détecte l'incohérence et doit recrawler le réseau pour valider la nouvelle structure. Cela prolonge encore le délai d'indexation et peut même bloquer la reconnaissance des variantes jusqu'à correction.
Est-ce que Google privilégie certaines langues ou régions dans le traitement hreflang ?
Non. Mueller confirme explicitement qu'il n'y a pas de préférence pour du contenu suisse, canadien ou autre. Toutes les combinaisons langues-pays sont traitées de manière égale, avec le même délai d'indexation multiplié.
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