Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 1:06 Pourquoi Google ajuste-t-il ses algorithmes tous les jours sans nous prévenir ?
- 2:40 Pourquoi Google News envoie-t-il du trafic direct dans vos stats Analytics ?
- 5:18 La qualité du site suffit-elle vraiment à garantir un bon classement Google ?
- 7:43 Mobile-Friendly est-il vraiment un critère de ranking décisif ou juste un signal parmi d'autres ?
- 9:19 Le temps de chargement influence-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 10:31 Le meta tag 'unavailable after' retire-t-il vraiment une page de l'index Google à date fixe ?
- 14:09 Faut-il encore un sitemap mobile séparé pour votre site en 2025 ?
- 14:11 Les rich snippets disparaissent-ils quand Google juge votre site de mauvaise qualité ?
- 22:58 Pourquoi vos données Search Console et Analytics ne correspondent-elles jamais ?
- 24:02 Faut-il vraiment ignorer les liens NoFollow issus d'attaques négatives ?
- 27:14 Faut-il arrêter de chercher le facteur de classement miracle qui fera monter votre site ?
- 38:01 Pourquoi un changement de site ralentit-il l'indexation de vos pages ?
- 42:23 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour ses pages statiques pour rester visible dans Google ?
John Mueller states that NoFollow links do not pass any PageRank and that their outgoing volume does not affect your ranking. This position clarifies a historical gray area: you can create NoFollow links without worrying about diluting your SEO juice. Essentially, focus on the quality of incoming DoFollow links rather than the NoFollow/DoFollow ratio of your outgoing links.
What you need to understand
What does this statement really mean on the ground?
Mueller's position addresses a recurring question: should you limit NoFollow outgoing links to preserve your SEO capital? The answer is no. Google confirms that the rel="nofollow" attribute effectively blocks PageRank transmission, but having 50 or 500 NoFollow outgoing links does not penalize your site.
This clarification affects several common practices. Blog comments with NoFollow, properly tagged affiliate links, or partner mentions do not dilute your authority. You are not "wasting" SEO juice by creating these links.
Why has this confusion persisted until now?
The NoFollow attribute has evolved. Introduced to combat spam, it initially functioned as an absolute blocker of PageRank. Then Google introduced the rel="sponsored" and rel="ugc" attributes, changing NoFollow into a "hint" rather than a strict directive.
This technical nuance has bred doubt. Many SEOs believed that Google could still "penalize" a site with an unbalanced ratio of outgoing links, even if they are NoFollow. Mueller dismisses this concern: it is not a ranking factor.
What are the implications for managing your link structure?
This statement applies only to outgoing links. It does not change the strategy for incoming link building: you still want high-quality DoFollow backlinks pointing to your site. This is where your authority is derived.
For your outgoing links, the logic becomes straightforward. Use NoFollow for anything related to monetization (affiliation, sponsorship), user-generated content (comments, forums), or pages you do not wish to endorse editorially. Volume is no longer an optimization criterion.
- Outgoing NoFollow does not dilute your internal or external PageRank
- The NoFollow/DoFollow outgoing ratio is not a ranking signal
- Focus your efforts on acquiring high-quality incoming DoFollow links
- Use NoFollow consistently for affiliation and UGC to comply with Google's guidelines
- The DoFollow internal structure remains crucial for distributing PageRank among your strategic pages
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Mueller's position aligns with what has been observed for years. No serious audit has ever shown that a high volume of outgoing NoFollow links correlates with a drop in rankings. News sites, filled with NoFollow links to external sources, rank perfectly well.
Where it gets tricky is in how Google actually treats NoFollow. Since the transition to a "hint", Google can theoretically choose to follow certain NoFollow links. But Mueller makes it clear: no PageRank transmission occurs. This technical distinction remains opaque for many practitioners. [To verify]: Is Google exploring NoFollow URLs for other signals (freshness, topicality) without passing authority?
What nuances should be applied to this rule?
The statement focuses on PageRank, not on other SEO dimensions. A NoFollow link to a penalized or spammy site does not pass juice, certainly, but can it nuance your link profile in Google's eyes? Technically no, according to Mueller. In practice, it is better to avoid associating your brand with toxic sites, even with NoFollow.
Another point: this rule only pertains to external outgoing links. For internal linking, heavily using NoFollow on your own pages remains a strategic error. You block PageRank distribution to your priority content, directly affecting its ability to rank.
In what cases does this rule not really apply?
Let's be honest: a site that places 100% of its outgoing links as NoFollow sends a strange behavioral signal. Google may see it as an attempt to manipulate PageRank sculpting, even though Mueller states that volume doesn't matter.
Likewise, completely neglecting outgoing DoFollow links to reliable sources may deprive your content of contextualization signals. Google uses outgoing links to understand your topic. An SEO article without any DoFollow links to established references (studies, tools, documentation) seems less credible than content that cites its sources.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do with your outgoing links?
Stop counting your outgoing NoFollow links. This is now an unnecessary metric. Focus your energy on the editorial quality of your DoFollow outgoing links: do they cite relevant and reliable sources? Do they enhance the credibility of your argument?
For your monetized links (affiliation, sponsorship), continue using rel="sponsored" or NoFollow. It is not a PageRank issue, but rather a matter of compliance with guidelines. Google penalizes non-disclosed link schemes, regardless of their impact on ranking.
What mistakes should be avoided in your linking strategy?
Do not turn all your outgoing links into NoFollow under the pretext of "preserving your juice". This practice of PageRank sculpting has been outdated for over 10 years. It impoverishes your content by cutting it off from its thematic ecosystem.
Conversely, remember that your internal linking works differently. There, each DoFollow link distributes PageRank among your pages. Use it strategically to boost your priority pages. A poorly placed internal NoFollow can block indexing or weaken a key page.
How do you audit your link profile to apply this rule?
Extract all your outgoing links using a Screaming Frog or Sitebulb crawl. Isolate those that are monetized or UGC: make sure they bear the appropriate attributes (sponsored, ugc, nofollow). This is the only check that truly matters.
For your editorial DoFollow outgoing links, ensure they point to quality resources. A link to a penalized or deindexed site is never a good idea, even if technically Google claims it doesn’t directly penalize you.
- Use rel="sponsored" for all commercial and affiliate links
- Apply rel="ugc" or NoFollow on comments and user-generated content
- Maintain editorial DoFollow links to reliable and relevant sources
- Never apply NoFollow to your strategic internal links
- Regularly audit your outgoing links for toxic or deindexed sites
- Ignore the overall NoFollow/DoFollow outgoing ratio: it is not an SEO KPI
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site avec 80% de liens sortants en NoFollow risque-t-il une pénalité ?
Les liens NoFollow internes bloquent-ils le PageRank comme les externes ?
Google suit-il quand même les URLs des liens NoFollow pour les crawler ?
Faut-il remplacer tous mes NoFollow par rel="sponsored" ou "ugc" ?
Peut-on récupérer du PageRank en supprimant des liens NoFollow sortants ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 21/05/2015
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.