Official statement
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Google claims that putting a page in noindex does not affect the value passed to the pages that are linked. In practice, you can exclude content from the index without fearing that it will penalize your internal linking. This statement paves the way for more flexible architectures where certain pages serve only as navigation hubs without being indexed.
What you need to understand
What does Mueller's statement really mean?
The noindex directive informs search engines that a page should not appear in search results. For years, the SEO consensus was that a non-indexed page constituted a dead end for PageRank. The underlying assumption: if Google cannot index a resource, how could it follow and value the links it contains?
Mueller asserts that this logic does not hold. A page with a noindex tag can perfectly pass value to the pages it points to. Google crawls the page, analyzes its content and outgoing links, but simply does not add it to its index. The flow of link equity remains intact.
Why does this nuance change the architectural game?
On a complex e-commerce site, you often have navigation pages or filters that generate duplicate content. Noindexing them seemed risky since they served as distribution points for internal linking. If they didn't pass any value, it would be better to block their crawl entirely.
With this clarification, you can now build purely functional, non-indexed navigation hubs that organize the user journey without polluting the index. These pages become technical connectors without claiming to compete in the SERP.
How does Google technically manage this transmission?
The Google crawler does not stop at the first noindex signal. It visits the page, extracts links, analyzes the semantic context, and calculates the distribution of PageRank. The noindex directive comes into play only at the time of indexing, not during the calculation of the link graph.
This technical distinction explains why a noindexed page can continue to serve as a topological bridge. It exists in the crawl graph, even if it disappears from the indexing graph. PageRank flows through the first, while search results utilize the second.
- A noindex page is still crawled and its links are followed
- The PageRank transmission operates normally from these pages
- You can structure your site with non-indexable hubs without loss of value
- This approach helps manage duplicate content and navigation pages
- The noindex directive affects the index, not the link graph
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Frankly, Mueller's position finally clarifies a gray area. Field tests had already shown that sites with noindex filter pages continued to rank well for their product listings. But the industry remained divided between those who blocked these pages in robots.txt and those who left them accessible with noindex.
The technical consistency is there: if Google follows links from robots.txt blocked pages, it would be illogical for it to ignore links from simply noindexed pages that it can crawl freely. [To be verified]: it remains to quantify whether this transmission occurs at 100% or if there is minor friction in practice.
In what cases could this rule show its limits?
Beware of orphan noindex pages. If your navigation hub is not linked from any indexed page itself, the incoming PageRank flow will already be weak. The transmission to target pages will exist, but it will start from a nearly zero base.
The second trap: the crawl budget. Mueller speaks of value transmission, not crawl prioritization. If you multiply crawlable noindex pages on a large site, you risk diluting the bot's attention. Google will crawl these pages, follow the links, but at the potential expense of deeper indexable content.
What does this statement reveal about Google's view of architecture?
Google is clearly pushing for a separation between user experience / index. You can create rich navigation layers for visitors without forcing their indexing. This philosophy aligns with modern approaches like JavaScript hydration where client-side rendering serves UX while static HTML serves SEO.
This is an invitation to think in terms of a strategic link graph rather than just a flat hierarchy. Some pages exist to distribute, others to capture traffic. Mixing both roles in every URL is no longer a technical obligation.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do with this information?
The first action: audit your current navigation pages. Identify those that generate duplicate or poor content but serve as internal linking hubs. Instead of blocking them in robots.txt (which cuts off PageRank transmission), set them to noindex, follow.
On e-commerce sites, apply this logic to multiple filters and sort options. A page like "Red dresses size M sorted by price" can remain crawlable with noindex if it contains links to strategic product pages. You clean the index while maintaining the link structure.
What mistakes should you avoid during implementation?
Do not confuse noindex with disallow robots.txt. The latter prevents crawling and effectively cuts off value transmission. If your goal is to clean the index while preserving PageRank flow, only noindex is suitable.
Also, avoid noindexing pages that receive qualified organic traffic. Just because a page seems redundant to you doesn't mean it isn't capturing long-tail traffic. Check first in Google Analytics and Search Console before removing URLs from the index.
How to verify that your architecture is effectively utilizing this principle?
Use an SEO crawler like Screaming Frog or OnCrawl to map your site. Isolate the noindex pages and trace the links they emit. Ensure that these links point to strategic indexable content, not to other noindex pages or dead ends.
In Search Console, monitor the index coverage report. The pages "Excluded by noindex tag" should be deliberate choices, not accidents. If key content appears there, you have a misconfigured directive issue.
- Audit all pages currently in noindex to verify their strategic role
- Replace disallow robots.txt with noindex on navigation hubs
- Ensure that noindex pages point to priority indexable content
- Check in Search Console that noindex exclusions are intentional
- Monitor the crawl rate to detect any budget dilution
- Document the architecture to prevent regressions during migrations
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une page en noindex transmet-elle autant de PageRank qu'une page indexée ?
Faut-il utiliser noindex ou disallow robots.txt pour les pages de navigation ?
Les pages noindex consomment-elles du budget de crawl inutilement ?
Peut-on noindexer des pages de catégorie sans impacter le ranking des produits ?
Comment tester si mes pages noindex transmettent bien le PageRank ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h11 · published on 27/10/2015
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