Official statement
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- 1:05 Do image redirections to HTML pages pass on PageRank?
- 1:05 Why does redirecting your images to third-party pages destroy their SEO value?
- 2:12 Should you really be concerned about TLDs for an international website?
- 2:37 Can .eu domains really target multiple countries without SEO penalties?
- 4:15 Should you really automate language redirections for your multilingual website?
- 6:35 Why does Googlebot ignore your cookies and how does it affect your multilingual strategy?
- 7:38 Do you really need to host your domain in the target country to rank locally?
- 9:00 Should you avoid multiple H1 tags when your logo is text-based?
- 9:01 Should you really limit the number of H1 tags on a page for SEO?
- 11:28 Do GSC impressions truly reflect what your users see?
- 12:00 What is a real impression in Search Console, and how does the viewport change everything?
- 14:03 Does lazy loading of images really block Googlebot?
- 14:08 Can lazy loading of images hinder their indexing by Google?
- 17:21 Should you really avoid modifying the content of a recent page?
- 19:30 Can bad backlinks really sink your Google ranking?
- 21:34 Can Google really ignore your unnatural backlinks without penalizing you?
- 24:05 Why do partial site migrations lead to longer SEO fluctuations compared to complete migrations?
- 27:00 Does site structure really enhance its indexing?
- 30:41 Why should you choose a 301 over a 307 when migrating to HTTPS?
- 33:35 Why does the 'site:' command take up to two months to reflect your actual changes?
- 34:54 Can the unavailable_after tag really control how long your content remains in Google's index?
- 35:56 Is Googlebot over-crawling your CSS and JS resources?
- 39:19 Does the 'Unavailable After' tag really allow you to schedule a page's removal from Google's index?
- 50:12 Is it really necessary to reindex the entire site after a URL change?
- 50:34 Should you really avoid changing the structure of your URLs?
- 53:00 Should you retranslate your backlink anchors when changing your site's main language?
- 53:00 Is changing your website's primary language a risk for losing backlinks?
- 54:12 Is the new Search Console really going to change your SEO diagnosis?
Google claims that altering internal link anchors does not lead to a major reassessment of the site unless there is a profound restructuring. For SEO practitioners, this means that optimizing the wording of a few links will not quickly boost your rankings. However, this statement leaves unclear what exactly constitutes a 'radical change' and how Google differentiates a simple tweak from a structural overhaul.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by 'major reassessment'?
Google continuously processes billion web pages, and each internal modification does not invariably trigger a complete recalibration of relevance signals. When Mueller refers to 'major reassessment', he is talking about a requalification of internal PageRank signals and topic modeling.
Changing an anchor from 'click here' to 'complete SEO guide 2025' certainly improves the link's semantics. But if the overall architecture remains the same — same hierarchy, same crawl depth, same priority pages — Google considers this a cosmetic adjustment rather than a structural change.
What actually counts as a 'radical change'?
Google does not provide a numerical threshold, complicating interpretation. One can deduce that a redesign of the internal linking with altered hierarchy, addition or removal of navigation levels, and massive redistribution of links from the homepage, would fall into this category.
Another typical scenario: moving from a closed silo architecture to a cross-thematic linking, where each content cluster strategically points to other clusters. This type of transformation affects the distribution of link juice and Google's topical understanding.
Do internal anchors still play a significant SEO role?
Yes, but their relative weight has likely decreased with the evolution of contextual understanding algorithms. Google no longer just reads an isolated anchor; it analyzes the surrounding paragraph, the source page, the target page, and all semantic signals.
Internal anchors mainly serve to clarify the thematic intent of a page rather than directly inject ranking power. This is useful for topic modeling, but less for directly manipulating positions on competitive queries.
- Changing a few anchors in isolation does not trigger priority recrawling or quick boosts
- A complete structural overhaul (hierarchy, silos, levels) can trigger a reassessment of relevance signals
- Internal anchors retain a role in topic modeling and internal PageRank distribution, but their isolated impact is limited
- Google prioritizes overall contextual analysis rather than the raw weight of an individual anchor
- The notion of 'radical change' remains vague: Google does not provide any precise threshold for pages or links involved
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with on-the-ground observations?
On paper, yes. A/B tests conducted on high-traffic sites show that a simple change of anchors on 10-15% of internal links produces no measurable effect in the following 30 days. The crawl budget does not increase, and rankings remain stable.
In contrast, cases where the entire linking structure is restructured — for example, by adding a layer of pillar pages and redirecting all links from satellite content — show a notable evolution after 6-8 weeks. This aligns with the idea that a radical change triggers a reassessment. [To be verified]: Google does not specify whether this reassessment is automated or requires a new complete crawl of the affected pages.
What nuances should be added to this assertion?
First point: Mueller talks about 'major reassessment', not total lack of impact. In other words, changing your anchors is not pointless; it’s just insufficient as an isolated lever. If you optimize anchors while also improving crawl depth, loading speed, and content quality, the cumulative effect can be significant.
Second nuance: the notion of 'radical change' is deliberately vague. Does adding 200 internal links on a 5000-page site constitute a radical change? And if these links all point to the same 5 strategic pages, thereby creating a new hub? Google does not clarify. This imprecision leaves much room for interpretation.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Small sites (fewer than 100 pages) may see quicker variations, simply because their crawl is more frequent and each modification represents a significant percentage of the whole. On a 30-page site, changing 10 anchors is 33% of the site — hard not to label that a 'radical change'.
Another exception: high-authority sites with a generous crawl budget. If Googlebot visits daily and indexes almost in real-time, even minor adjustments can be taken into account quickly. What remains true is that ranking impact will only be visible if the change truly modifies the topical understanding or the distribution of PageRank.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely if you want to optimize your internal linking?
Start with a complete audit of the structure: average page depth, internal PageRank distribution (using Screaming Frog or OnCrawl), identification of orphan or under-linked pages. This assessment will tell you whether you need a structural overhaul or just simple adjustments.
If your architecture is already solid, optimizing anchors can enhance thematic clarity, but don’t expect a dramatic boost. However, if you identify poorly connected silos, strategic pages buried 5 clicks from the home page, or a dilution of link juice, you’ve found a powerful lever.
What mistakes should be avoided when making internal anchor modifications?
The first classic mistake: over-optimizing. Stuffing all your anchors with exact match keywords ('SEO agency Paris', 'technical SEO expert', etc.) makes the content artificial and brings no extra gain. Google understands synonyms and context; there's no need to force it.
The second trap: modifying anchors without reviewing the relevance of target pages. If you change the anchor to a target page that is not thematically aligned, you create confusion for the algorithms. The anchor must accurately reflect the content of the destination page.
How can you check if the modifications are bearing fruit?
Regular monitoring in Google Search Console: crawl stats (number of pages crawled daily), index coverage (indexed vs. deindexed pages), performance (impressions and clicks on the target pages). If your modifications are truly structural, you should observe an increase in the crawl budget within 4-6 weeks.
On the ranking side, do not rely on daily micro-variations. Wait at least 60 days before drawing conclusions. Internal linking adjustments require several complete crawl cycles to be fully integrated by Google.
- Conduct an audit of the internal structure (depth, PageRank distribution, orphan pages)
- Prioritize structural overhaul before anchor optimization if the architecture is lacking
- Avoid over-optimizing anchors (repeated exact match keywords)
- Check the thematic alignment between anchor and destination page
- Follow crawl stats in Search Console to detect changes in Googlebot’s behavior
- Wait 60 days before assessing the ranking impact of a structural modification
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Modifier mes ancres de liens internes va-t-il améliorer mon référencement rapidement ?
Qu'est-ce qu'une « modification radicale » selon Google ?
Les ancres de liens internes ont-elles encore un impact SEO en 2025 ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour voir l'effet d'une refonte du maillage interne ?
Dois-je optimiser toutes mes ancres avec des mots-clés exacts ?
🎥 From the same video 28
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 07/09/2017
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