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Official statement

Links from directories where you submit the content yourself are typically ignored by Google because they do not count as natural recommendations from the site.
33:00
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 27/07/2018 ✂ 33 statements
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Other statements from this video 32
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  2. 1:48 Peut-on vraiment détecter les pénalités algorithmiques cachées d'un domaine expiré ?
  3. 3:50 Comment gérer le contenu dupliqué quand on gère plusieurs entités distinctes ?
  4. 4:25 Faut-il dupliquer son contenu pour chaque établissement local ou tout regrouper sur une page ?
  5. 6:18 Pourquoi les suppressions DMCA massives peuvent-elles détruire le classement d'un site entier ?
  6. 6:18 Les retraits DMCA massifs peuvent-ils vraiment dégrader le classement d'un site ?
  7. 7:18 Faut-il privilégier un sous-domaine ou un sous-répertoire pour héberger vos pages AMP ?
  8. 7:22 Où héberger vos pages AMP : sous-domaine, sous-répertoire ou paramètre ?
  9. 8:25 La balise canonical fonctionne-t-elle vraiment si les pages sont différentes ?
  10. 8:35 Faut-il vraiment bannir le rel=canonical de vos pages paginées ?
  11. 10:04 Le scraping peut-il vraiment détruire le référencement d'un site à faible autorité ?
  12. 11:23 L'adresse IP du serveur influence-t-elle encore le référencement local ?
  13. 11:45 L'adresse IP de votre serveur impacte-t-elle encore votre SEO local ?
  14. 13:39 Les images cliquables sans balise <a> sont-elles vraiment invisibles pour Google ?
  15. 13:39 Un lien sans balise <a> peut-il transmettre du PageRank ?
  16. 15:11 Comment Google indexe-t-il vraiment vos pages AMP en présence d'un noindex ?
  17. 15:13 Le noindex d'une page HTML bloque-t-il vraiment l'indexation de sa version AMP associée ?
  18. 18:21 Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer après une action manuelle complète ?
  19. 18:25 Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer d'une action manuelle Google ?
  20. 21:59 Faut-il intégrer des mots-clés dans son nom de domaine pour mieux ranker ?
  21. 22:43 Faut-il vraiment indexer son fichier robots.txt dans Google ?
  22. 24:08 Pourquoi le cache Google affiche-t-il votre page différemment du rendu réel ?
  23. 25:29 DMCA et disavow : pourquoi Google privilégie-t-il l'une sur l'autre pour gérer contenu dupliqué et backlinks toxiques ?
  24. 28:19 Le taux de crawl influence-t-il vraiment le classement dans Google ?
  25. 28:19 Votre serveur limite-t-il le crawl de Google plus que vous ne le pensez ?
  26. 31:00 Les signaux sociaux sont-ils vraiment inutiles pour le référencement Google ?
  27. 31:25 Les profils sociaux améliorent-ils le classement Google ?
  28. 32:03 Les profils sociaux multiples boostent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
  29. 33:25 Les liens d'annuaires sont-ils vraiment tous ignorés par Google ?
  30. 36:14 Faut-il activer HSTS immédiatement lors d'une migration de domaine vers HTTPS ?
  31. 42:35 Pourquoi les étoiles d'avis mettent-elles autant de temps à apparaître dans Google ?
  32. 52:00 Le niveau de stock influence-t-il vraiment le classement de vos fiches produits ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to ignore links from directories where you submit your own content because they do not represent natural endorsements. This means that submitting your site to directories will not provide you with any SEO benefits in terms of PageRank or authority. The nuance lies in the definition of 'directories': not all directories are created equal, and some specific contexts may escape this general rule.

What you need to understand

What does Google really mean by 'link directories'?

A link directory is a site that lists URLs submitted manually by the site owners themselves. These platforms often operate on a self-registration principle: you fill out a form, add your URL, a description, and your link appears. Google believes these links do not constitute genuine editorial endorsements because you chose to appear there, not the directory owner recommending you.

The distinction hinges on the nature of the selection process. A natural link comes from an editor who independently decides to point to your content because they find it relevant. A directory link results from an active effort on your part. Google treats these two types of backlinks very differently.

Why does Google ignore these links instead of penalizing them?

Google has evolved in its management of link spam. Instead of imposing massive manual penalties, the modern algorithm favors silent filtering: worthless links are simply ignored, and their PageRank score is not passed on. This approach prevents false positives and reduces the need for manual disavowals for webmasters.

The engine detects these directories through several signals: repetitive link patterns, lack of editorial curation, abnormal ratio of outgoing links to original content, and absence of user engagement. Once identified, these domains lose their ability to transmit authority, while not triggering any alerts in Search Console.

Does this rule apply to all types of directories without exception?

The statement mentions 'typically,' which implies there are exceptions. Google never publicly specifies the exact thresholds, but field observations suggest that some very selective directories with genuine editorial curation may retain minimal value. Specialized professional directories, where admission requires strict human validation, are probably not treated the same as generic link farms.

The gray area concerns local citations: listings like Yelp, Yellow Pages, or industry equivalents. Although you submit your information, these platforms serve as NAP (Name, Address, Phone) consistency signals for local SEO. Google treats them differently from traditional web directories, even if Mueller does not clarify this in the statement.

  • Generalist directories with open submissions are systematically filtered by Google
  • The filtering occurs by ignoring the link, not by directly penalizing the source site
  • Some very selective professional directories may possibly escape this rule
  • Local citations are a unique case treated differently by the algorithm
  • The effort spent on directory submissions might be better utilized elsewhere

SEO Expert opinion

Does Google’s stance truly reflect observed reality on the ground?

Overall, yes. Empirical testing shows that mass directory submission campaigns no longer produce any measurable impact on rankings for several years. Backlink tracking tools detect these links, but their correlation with ranking gains is zero, or even negative when the profile becomes too artificial.

The problem is that this statement remains deliberately vague on the precise criteria for distinction. What transforms an ignored directory into a legitimate resource? The level of curation? The link/content ratio? The rate of manual validation? Mueller provides no figures, no thresholds. [To be verified]: to what extent does a paid directory with strict human validation retain residual value?

What contradictions can be observed between this statement and some current SEO practices?

Some local SEOs continue to recommend submissions to specialized trade directories, and their clients sometimes see positive effects. Do these results contradict Mueller? Not necessarily: it is likely that Google distinguishes vertical professional directories (e.g., bar associations, medical boards, official registries) from horizontal link farms.

Another point of friction is profile platforms like Crunchbase, AngelList, or GitHub. You submit your profile, yet these backlinks seem to retain value. The difference likely lies in the fact that these platforms generate real traffic, engagement, and serve as entity verification sources for the Knowledge Graph. Google treats them as E-E-A-T signals rather than simple directories.

In what contexts should this rule be nuanced?

Local SEO is the most obvious case. Citations in Google Business Profile, Bing Places, Apple Maps, and sector equivalents (TripAdvisor for hospitality, Doctolib for health) operate on a self-submission principle. Still, their impact on local rankings is documented and measurable. Google clearly does not apply the same filtering logic here.

The second nuance is government or institutional directories. Being listed in an official trade register, an academic database, or a directory of certified organizations likely receives different treatment. These sources carry an intrinsic authority weight, even if the submission is manual. [To be verified]: is there an internal whitelist of domains for directories exempt from automatic filtering?

Attention: Do not confuse 'ignored' with 'risk-free'. A backlink profile composed of 80% directory links can trigger quality filters even if each link individually is simply ignored. The overall pattern matters as much as isolated links.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you stop doing immediately after this statement?

Cease any systematic directory submission campaigns immediately. Tools that promise to submit your site to 500 directories in one click generate no measurable SEO ROI. The time spent on these manual or semi-automated tasks yields no return in terms of PageRank or ranking.

Also stop paying for listings in low-quality directories, even if they claim to be 'nofollow' or 'thematic'. Your link building budget should focus on levers that actually transmit authority: editorial guest posting, digital PR, creation of linkable content, strategic partnerships.

What positive actions should you prioritize instead of directory link building?

Invest in creating content that naturally attracts backlinks: original data studies, free tools, sourced infographics, comprehensive guides. These assets generate genuine editorial links, the kind that Google truly values. A single well-designed study can produce more quality links than a year’s worth of directory submissions.

Develop relationships with editors in your industry. Modern link building relies on networking: identifying relevant authoritative sites, understanding their editorial needs, and proposing valuable contributions. This approach requires more effort but generates contextual backlinks that genuinely transmit PageRank.

How can you audit your backlink profile to identify unnecessary directory links?

Use a backlink profiling tool (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush) and filter domains by the outgoing/incoming link ratio. A typical directory features thousands of outgoing links for a few dozen incoming ones. Create a list of these suspicious domains and analyze their proportion in your overall profile.

If more than 30% of your backlinks come from directories, your profile lacks diversity and naturalness. There’s no need to systematically disavow them (Google already ignores them), but focus your future efforts on acquiring quality contextual links to rebalance the ratio. A healthy profile features a majority of editorial links inserted in relevant content.

  • Stop any automated submissions to generalist directories starting today
  • Reallocate the directory budget towards digital PR, editorial guest posting, or creating linkable content
  • Audit your backlink profile every quarter to measure the evolution of the directory/editorial link ratio
  • For local SEO only: maintain NAP citations on major platforms (Google Business, Bing, Apple Maps)
  • Develop a linkable assets strategy (studies, tools, data) to attract natural backlinks
  • Document quality backlink sources obtained to identify the most effective channels
Submitting to directories is now a relic of SEO. Google has been filtering these links for years, and this official statement simply confirms a ground reality. Focus your resources on tactics that generate authentic editorial links: creating remarkable content, digital press relations, strategic partnerships. These optimizations require specialized expertise and rigorous execution. If you lack the time or internal skills to implement a modern link building strategy, partnering with a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate your results by helping you avoid costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je désavouer tous mes liens d'annuaires existants après cette déclaration ?
Non, c'est inutile. Google indique qu'il ignore déjà ces liens, donc ils ne transmettent ni autorité ni pénalité. Le désaveu ne sert que pour les liens toxiques actifs qui risquent de déclencher une action manuelle, ce qui n'est pas le cas des annuaires standards.
Les annuaires locaux comme Yelp ou Pages Jaunes sont-ils concernés par cette règle ?
Probablement pas de la même manière. Ces plateformes servent de signaux de cohérence NAP pour le SEO local et génèrent du trafic réel. Google les traite différemment des annuaires web généralistes, même si Mueller ne le précise pas explicitement.
Un annuaire payant avec validation manuelle stricte conserve-t-il une valeur SEO ?
C'est une zone grise. Les annuaires professionnels très sélectifs, avec une vraie curation éditoriale, peuvent échapper au filtrage automatique. Aucun seuil officiel n'existe, mais l'observation terrain suggère qu'ils conservent une valeur minimale si le processus de sélection est rigoureux.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google filtre les liens d'annuaires après soumission ?
Le filtrage intervient lors du crawl et du traitement des backlinks, généralement dans les semaines suivant la découverte. Mais l'effet pratique est immédiat : un lien filtré ne transmet jamais de PageRank, même temporairement.
Cette déclaration remet-elle en cause toute stratégie de soumission manuelle de contenu ?
Non, elle cible spécifiquement les répertoires de liens. Soumettre un article à un média qui le publie après validation éditoriale, ou proposer un tool à Product Hunt, génère des backlinks contextuels légitimes. La différence tient à la valeur ajoutée et à la curation.
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