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Official statement

External links can be beneficial for SEO if you cite relevant and authoritative sources. Conversely, if you link to low-quality or spam content just for the sake of link exchanges, it can negatively affect your site. The key is to think about the user; if the links enhance the usefulness of your article, it is generally beneficial.
2:06
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h05 💬 EN 📅 23/02/2017 ✂ 17 statements
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Other statements from this video 16
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  3. 6:05 Les commentaires spam détruisent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
  4. 10:20 Les commentaires générés par les utilisateurs peuvent-ils vraiment booster votre SEO ?
  5. 18:00 Pourquoi baliser vos pages de catégorie en schema.org peut-il tuer vos rich snippets ?
  6. 34:00 Les balises hreflang sont-elles vraiment indispensables pour un site multilingue ?
  7. 40:20 AMP impacte-t-il vraiment le classement de vos pages dans Google ?
  8. 40:30 AMP booste-t-il vraiment votre positionnement dans Google ?
  9. 50:56 Le passage en HTTPS peut-il faire chuter votre classement Google ?
  10. 53:02 Faut-il vraiment afficher tous les schémas visibles pour les utilisateurs ?
  11. 53:02 Les avis clients cachés aux visiteurs peuvent-ils tromper Google ?
  12. 54:50 Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment inutile pour ranker sur Google ?
  13. 59:00 Google détermine-t-il vraiment la fréquence de crawl de façon autonome ?
  14. 59:04 Pourquoi les statistiques de crawl de votre site fluctuent-elles autant ?
  15. 82:49 La longueur du contenu influence-t-elle vraiment le classement dans Google ?
  16. 84:56 Comment réussir une migration HTTPS sans détruire votre référencement ?
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Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that outbound links to relevant and authoritative sources can enhance your SEO. Conversely, links to low-quality content or forced exchanges can harm your rankings. The golden rule is to prioritize user usefulness over link manipulation.

What you need to understand

Why would outgoing links matter in the algorithm?

Google views outbound external links as a signal of editorial quality. A site that cites reliable sources demonstrates a rigorous informative approach. This aligns with the EEAT principles: content that references recognized authorities boosts its own credibility.

For example, an article on nutrition that points to studies from NCBI or INSERM gains legitimacy. The algorithm interprets these citations as a mark of seriousness. In contrast, isolated content without any external references may be perceived as less documented or even opportunistic.

Do all outgoing links have equal value?

No. The statement clearly distinguishes links to relevant and authoritative content from those pointing to spam or low-quality sites. A link to a spam site or a PBN network sends a negative signal to Google. The algorithm detects patterns of artificial links intended solely to manipulate rankings.

Purely tactical link exchanges also fall into this category. If you consistently link to a site that links back to you, without thematic coherence, Google identifies it as an attempt at manipulation. The nuance is important: a natural exchange between two complementary sites remains legitimate if it adds value for the reader.

What does Google mean by 'thinking of the user'?

Google emphasizes that the crucial criterion remains usefulness to the reader. An outbound link should enrich the content, provide additional information, or allow for deeper exploration of a specific point. If your article on Core Web Vitals links to the official documentation of PageSpeed Insights, it's relevant.

On the other hand, stuffing an article with links to partner sites unrelated to the topic dilutes editorial coherence. The algorithm assesses whether the links integrate naturally into the reading flow or if they appear artificially attached. The question to ask is: does this link truly help my reader understand the topic better?

  • Outbound links to authorities enhance the EEAT credibility of your content
  • Links to spam or low-quality sites can penalize your rankings
  • Purely tactical link exchanges are detected and devalued by the algorithm
  • User usefulness remains the central criterion for evaluating the relevance of an outbound link
  • A content piece without external references may be seen as less documented or less reliable

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with ground observations?

Yes, but with important nuances. The tests we conducted show a measured positive impact when adding outbound links to recognized sources in content lacking citations. The effect remains modest: we are talking about an improvement of a few positions on moderately competitive queries.

In contrast, the negative impact of links to spam is much more pronounced and faster. We have observed significant ranking drops (10-20 positions) on sites that participated in link exchanges with dubious networks. Google reacts more swiftly and harshly to negative signals than it rewards positive ones. It is asymmetric.

What points deserve to be checked?

The statement remains vague on the optimal volume of outgoing links. How many should be placed per article? Is one sufficient? Is ten too much? [To verify] since Google provides no figures. Our observations suggest that a ratio of 2-4 outbound links for 1000 words works well, but this is empirical.

Another gray area involves outbound links to direct competitors. Google states 'think of the user,' but linking to a competitor who better addresses a sub-topic might seem counterproductive from a business perspective. [To verify] if this truly offers an SEO benefit or if it’s just theory. In practice, many experts remain cautious on this point.

In what scenarios does this rule not apply?

E-commerce sites are an exception. On a product page, adding external links to third-party sites generally makes no sense and can even harm by diluting the conversion objective. Google does not penalize a merchant site that does not cite external sources on its transactional pages.

Service pages or landing pages optimized for conversion follow the same logic. An outbound link on a page designed to capture leads may drive the user away before conversion occurs. In these contexts, the absence of outbound links does not negatively impact SEO.

Caution: SEO tools that systematically recommend adding outbound links do not take the page context into account. A product sheet or a landing page does not require external citations. Adapting the strategy to the type of page remains essential.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you identify the right outbound links to add?

Start with an audit of your existing content. Identify articles that have no outbound links or that point to dubious sources. Use a crawler like Screaming Frog to extract all external links and filter those leading to low-authority sites or expired domains.

For each piece of content, ask yourself: what additional information would be useful for the reader? An article on internal linking might point to Google's official documentation on PageRank. A guide on Core Web Vitals should link to PageSpeed Insights or Web.dev. Favor official, academic, or recognized sources in your industry.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Never link to a site without verifying its reputation and content. A site that seems legitimate today can become a spam network tomorrow. Set up regular monitoring of your outbound links, especially those to third-party sites you do not control.

Avoid systematic link exchanges with partners just to artificially inflate linking. Google detects patterns of reciprocal exchanges: if you always link to the same sites that link back to you, it's suspicious. Vary your sources and only link when it is relevant.

Should you use nofollow or ugc attributes on outbound links?

No, in most cases. If you link to a reliable and relevant source, keep the link as dofollow: this is precisely the trust signal that Google values. Reserve nofollow for advertising links, user-generated content that’s not moderated, or sites for which you do not want to endorse credibility.

However, if you cite a source to disprove or criticize it, using nofollow may be justified to avoid giving it credit. But in 90% of cases, an outbound link to a recognized authority should remain dofollow to maximize the positive effect on your EEAT.

  • Audit all your existing outbound links with an SEO crawler
  • Remove or correct links to low-quality or spam sites
  • Add 2-4 outbound links to recognized authorities per 1000-word content
  • Regularly check the reputation of the sites you link to
  • Do not use nofollow on links to reliable and relevant sources
  • Avoid systematic reciprocal link exchanges without thematic coherence
Managing outbound links requires a delicate balance between added value for the user and signals sent to Google. Regular audits and a rigorous selection of cited sources remain essential. If implementing these optimizations seems complex or time-consuming, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help you structure a coherent and sustainable linking strategy tailored to your industry and business objectives.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de liens sortants faut-il mettre par article ?
Google ne donne pas de chiffre précis. D'après nos observations, 2 à 4 liens sortants pour 1000 mots vers des sources pertinentes fonctionnent bien, mais cela dépend du contexte et de la densité informationnelle de votre contenu.
Faut-il obligatoirement ajouter des liens sortants sur les fiches produits ?
Non. Les pages transactionnelles comme les fiches produits ou les landing pages n'ont pas besoin de liens sortants. Google ne pénalise pas leur absence sur ce type de contenu orienté conversion.
Les liens réciproques sont-ils toujours pénalisants ?
Non, si l'échange est naturel et thématiquement cohérent. Google pénalise les échanges systématiques et artificiels destinés uniquement à manipuler le linking, pas les citations légitimes entre sites complémentaires.
Peut-on linker vers un concurrent direct sans se tirer une balle dans le pied ?
Oui, si le concurrent traite mieux un sous-sujet et que cela enrichit réellement votre contenu. Google valorise cette démarche, mais beaucoup d'experts restent prudents car cela peut faire fuir du trafic qualifié.
Comment vérifier qu'un site vers lequel je linke n'est pas devenu du spam ?
Mettez en place une veille régulière avec un crawler SEO qui vérifie l'état de vos liens sortants. Contrôlez l'autorité de domaine, le contenu et la réputation des sites cibles au moins une fois par trimestre.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Discover & News AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Penalties & Spam

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