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Official statement

No 50% link power loss is associated with redirects, contrary to some rumors.
2:36
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 59:08 💬 EN 📅 04/04/2017 ✂ 20 statements
Watch on YouTube (2:36) →
Other statements from this video 19
  1. 1:34 Les redirections font-elles vraiment perdre du PageRank ou pas ?
  2. 1:35 Les redirections multiples diluent-elles réellement le jus de lien transmis ?
  3. 2:05 Les redirections sur sous-domaines vers l'externe pénalisent-elles vraiment votre SEO ?
  4. 7:28 Pourquoi vos pages n'apparaissent-elles pas dans l'index malgré votre sitemap ?
  5. 15:33 Les erreurs 404 impactent-elles vraiment votre positionnement dans Google ?
  6. 15:42 Faut-il supprimer les pages de profil avec peu de contenu pour éviter une pénalité ?
  7. 16:47 Les filtres canoniques peuvent-ils empêcher Google d'indexer vos produits ?
  8. 17:41 Faut-il encore utiliser 'noindex' dans robots.txt ou est-ce déjà obsolète ?
  9. 19:56 Faut-il vraiment passer tous vos liens externes en nofollow par défaut ?
  10. 21:14 La canonisation vers la page 1 peut-elle ruiner l'indexation de vos produits ?
  11. 26:02 Le texte d'ancrage des liens internes influence-t-il vraiment le positionnement ?
  12. 26:17 Le texte d'ancrage interne influence-t-il vraiment la compréhension de vos pages par Google ?
  13. 39:23 La compression d'images impacte-t-elle vraiment votre classement Google ?
  14. 46:01 Le Data Highlighter reste-t-il pertinent pour tester les données structurées ?
  15. 46:05 Faut-il abandonner le Data Highlighter pour implémenter du balisage structuré directement ?
  16. 54:42 Faut-il vraiment éviter les redirections IP automatiques sur les sites multilingues ?
  17. 55:16 Faut-il vraiment limiter les redirections IP à la page d'accueil pour le SEO multilingue ?
  18. 60:12 Les appels publicitaires non affichés impactent-ils vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
  19. 90:15 Faut-il vraiment conserver les redirections après la suppression d'un produit ?
📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google firmly denies the urban legend of a 50% power loss during a redirect. In practice, a well-implemented 301 or 302 redirect passes on the full PageRank without measurable loss. This clarification helps remove the barriers on technical redesigns and site migrations that require redirect chains, provided best practices are followed.

What you need to understand

Where does this 50% loss rumor originate?

For years, the SEO community has spread the idea that a redirect results in an automatic loss of 50% of link power. This belief dates back to the early days of PageRank sculpting, when some practitioners observed ranking fluctuations after migrations.

The myth has fueled itself through partial observations and random correlations. When a site lost traffic after a redesign with redirects, many attributed this decline to a mechanical loss of PageRank rather than implementation or structural errors.

What exactly does Google say about this?

The statement is unambiguous: no 50% loss exists. Google treats both 301 and 302 redirects similarly, regarding them as signals for transferring link authority to the destination page.

Technically, the algorithm follows the redirect chain and allocates the full PageRank to the final page. There is no reduction coefficient automatically applied at each redirect hop.

Why does this clarification change the game?

This confirmation frees technical projects that require complex URL migrations. You can restructure your hierarchy, switch to HTTPS, or change domains without fearing systematic penalties on your authority.

However, Google does not say that redirects are 100% neutral. A poorly designed chain can slow down crawling, generate crawling errors, or create loops. It is the technical implementation that poses problems, not the redirect principle itself.

  • Both 301 and 302 redirects transfer PageRank without a mechanical loss of 50%
  • Redirect chains remain functional but should be limited to a maximum of 3 hops
  • Correct implementation (HTTP status, absence of loops) is more critical than the number of redirects
  • A well-planned migration with clean redirects does not penalize the site's authority
  • The myth of PageRank Sculpting through redirects is no longer technically valid

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Overall, yes. Well-executed migrations with clean 301 redirects show authority preservation in most cases. Sites that lose traffic after migration often have structural issues (broken architecture, destroyed internal linking, content loss).

The real issue is never the redirect itself, but its context: too long chains, redirects to irrelevant pages, or worse, lazily redirecting to the home page. Google follows the redirect, but if it leads to inappropriate content, the relevance signal collapses.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Google remains vague on a crucial point: the speed of PageRank transfer. Saying that there is no loss does not mean that the transfer is instantaneous. Observations show variable delays depending on the crawling frequency of the source page.

Additionally, there is a difference between not losing PageRank and maintaining your actual ranking. If you redirect 50 URLs to a single consolidated page, PageRank theoretically adds up, but thematic relevance may dilute. [To be verified] how much Google adjusts the relevance signal in these massive consolidations.

In what cases might this rule show its limits?

Temporary 302 redirects have long been treated differently. Google now claims they also transfer PageRank, but the historical behavior was less clear. If your site has been using 302s for months, check that Google hasn't interpreted this as a signal of non-permanence.

Excessive redirect chains (5+ hops) pose a crawl budget problem more than a PageRank loss. Googlebot may abandon tracking before reaching the final page, which effectively results in a total loss of the link.

Note: A redirect to a 404 page or a URL blocked by robots.txt completely nullifies the PageRank transfer. Always check that your destination URLs are crawlable and return a 200 status.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you check if your redirects are transferring authority?

First step: audit your redirect chains with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Identify any chain exceeding 2 hops and correct them to point directly to the final destination.

Secondly, check in the Search Console that Google is properly indexing the destination URLs, not the old redirected URLs. If the old ones persist in the index after several weeks, it’s a sign that something is blocking the crawl.

What mistakes should be avoided during a migration with redirects?

Never redirect in bulk to the home page for convenience. Each old URL must point to the most thematically relevant page. A generic redirect destroys the relevance signal even if the technical PageRank is passed.

Avoid redirect loops and client-side redirects via JavaScript. Google can follow them, but it’s slower and less reliable than a standard HTTP 301 server redirect.

What concrete steps should you take after this clarification?

If you've delayed a redesign out of fear of losing SEO juice, you can now plan with confidence. Prepare a 1:1 mapping table between old and new URLs, implement clean 301 redirects, and monitor the evolution of organic traffic over 3 months.

For complex sites with thousands of pages, a technical migration remains a delicate project that requires expertise and specialized tools. If your internal team lacks experience on these projects, it may be wise to consult a specialized SEO agency to avoid classic pitfalls and ensure a seamless transition without loss of visibility.

  • Audit all existing redirect chains and reduce them to a maximum of 1-2 hops
  • Ensure that each redirect points to a thematically relevant page, not just to the home page
  • Test HTTP codes (301 vs 302) and correct accidental 302s to 301 for permanent changes
  • Monitor the indexing of new URLs in the Search Console for 4-6 weeks post-migration
  • Document the mapping table to facilitate rollback in case of critical issues
  • Avoid JavaScript or meta-refresh redirects; favor server-side redirects
Redirects do not dilute PageRank if they are implemented correctly. The real issue lies in the quality of thematic mapping and the technical cleanliness of the chains. A well-planned migration preserves acquired authority and can even improve the site's overall structure.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une redirection 301 fait-elle vraiment perdre 50% de puissance de lien ?
Non. Google confirme qu'aucune perte de 50% n'existe. Les redirections 301 transfèrent le PageRank intégralement vers la page de destination si elles sont correctement implémentées.
Quelle différence entre une redirection 301 et 302 pour le PageRank ?
Google traite désormais les deux types de manière similaire pour le transfert de PageRank. La 301 signale un changement permanent, la 302 un changement temporaire, mais les deux transfèrent l'autorité.
Combien de redirections successives peut-on enchaîner sans risque ?
Google peut suivre plusieurs sauts, mais il est recommandé de limiter à 3 redirections maximum pour éviter les problèmes de budget de crawl et garantir un transfert rapide.
Faut-il supprimer les anciennes redirections après plusieurs mois ?
Non, conservez les redirections indéfiniment sauf contrainte technique. Les backlinks externes continuent de pointer vers les anciennes URLs et le PageRank doit être préservé.
Une redirection vers une page moins pertinente transfère-t-elle quand même le PageRank ?
Le PageRank technique est transféré, mais le signal de pertinence thématique s'affaiblit. Google peut dévaloriser le lien si la destination n'est pas cohérente avec le contexte de la page source.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO Links & Backlinks Redirects

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