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Official statement

For sites using AMP as the primary version (canonical AMP), it is directly utilized for mobile-first indexing. This means Google relies on this version for ranking.
11:45
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:45 💬 EN 📅 17/05/2018 ✂ 6 statements
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Other statements from this video 5
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  4. 45:06 La vitesse de chargement impacte-t-elle vraiment votre positionnement Google ?
  5. 52:48 Les URL dynamiques avec paramètres sont-elles vraiment pénalisées par Google ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google directly indexes the AMP version when it is declared as canonical. This version then becomes the unique reference for mobile-first ranking. Specifically, the content, structured data, and optimizations of your AMP solely determine your positioning. Ensure that your AMP contains all critical SEO signals, not just a lightweight version of your page.

What you need to understand

What exactly is a canonical AMP?

A canonical AMP occurs when you declare your AMP page as the main version through the canonical tag. Unlike the traditional setup where AMP is an alternative version of a standard HTML page, here the AMP becomes the only reference version.

This setup particularly concerns sites fully built in AMP, without a traditional HTML equivalent. Google then has only one source to analyze your content, extract your relevance signals, and determine your ranking.

How does this distinction affect mobile-first indexing?

Mobile-first indexing means Google crawls and prioritizes the mobile version of a site for indexing. For a canonical AMP, that mobile version IS the AMP. No redundancy, no parallel desktop version.

Google's bot therefore directly analyzes your AMP: its semantic markup, textual content, images, structured data. Any signals missing from this AMP version are invisible for ranking. If your AMP is lacking compared to a hypothetical desktop version, you lose signals.

What are the differences with an alternative AMP configuration?

In a traditional configuration, you have a standard HTML page (the canonical) and an alternative AMP version (with rel="amphtml"). Google indexes the canonical and uses the AMP for fast formats such as stories or mobile carousel.

With a canonical AMP, there's no fallback. Google indexes the AMP directly. If a critical element is missing from your AMP — a paragraph of content, a structured FAQ, a breadcrumb — it's also missing for Google. The configuration requires total consistency between AMP performance and semantic richness.

  • Canonical AMP version: directly indexed, serves as the unique reference for mobile-first ranking
  • All SEO signals must be present in the AMP: title tags, meta, structured data, internal linking
  • No backup desktop version: if the AMP is low in content or markup, the ranking suffers
  • Performance and SEO merge: it's impossible to sacrifice semantic depth in the name of AMP speed
  • Check Search Console: the "Mobile-First Indexing" section shows which version Google is actually using

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, and this is precisely where many struggle. On paper, a canonical AMP simplifies architecture: a single version to maintain, less redundancy. In practice, many canonical AMPs are underwhelming because developers treat AMP as a performance format, not as a complete SEO page.

Tests show that sites in canonical AMP lose positions if their content is truncated, if FAQs are not marked up in JSON-LD, or if internal linking is oversimplified. Google indexes what it sees, and if the AMP is sparse, the ranking follows. No mystery here, just brutal consistency.

What nuances should be added?

Google does not explicitly state that AMP performance compensates for lighter content. That’s a trap. Loading speed is just one signal among others. If your competitor has a rich HTML page that loads in two seconds and your ultra-fast AMP lacks semantic depth, you lose.

Another nuance: not all AMP components are equal. Some elements — like amp-accordion or amp-lightbox — can hide content from Google if poorly implemented. Just because your content is technically in the DOM doesn’t guarantee it is well indexed and weighted. [To verify] on each project with Google rendering tests.

In what cases does this rule cause problems?

E-commerce sites in canonical AMP often struggle. AMP product pages lose modules (detailed customer reviews, comparison tables, enhanced cross-sell blocks) to comply with format constraints. As a result: fewer relevance signals, fewer conversions, and sometimes a drop in ranking.

Editorial sites with long content and interactive formats (calculators, quizzes, dynamic graphics) face the same issue. AMP imposes JavaScript restrictions that limit editorial richness. If this richness contained SEO signals (time spent, engagement, backlinks to specific sections), you lose a competitive edge.

Attention: If your strategy relies on rich, interactive, or highly segmented content, a canonical AMP can disadvantage you against competitors with optimized responsive HTML. Evaluate the trade-off between performance and semantic depth before switching.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do if you're in canonical AMP?

Audit your AMP as if it were your only page. Check that all critical SEO elements are present: title tags and meta descriptions identical to what you would put on a standard HTML page, complete structured data (Product, Article, FAQ, Breadcrumb), comprehensive internal linking with optimized anchors.

Test the rendering in Google Search Console using the "URL Inspection" tool. Compare what Google sees with what you see in the browser. If entire sections don't appear in the rendering, investigate: poorly configured AMP components, content loaded too late in lazy load, or JavaScript not interpreted by Googlebot.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Do not treat AMP as an acceptable "light" version just because it loads quickly. Speed does not compensate for semantic poverty. If you remove content, FAQs, tables, or images with descriptive alt text to meet AMP quotas, you sabotage your SEO.

Avoid AMP components that hide content without clear context for Google. A closed amp-accordion by default may be interpreted as secondary content. An amp-lightbox may isolate text that Google does not weight as highly as immediately visible content.

How can you check if your configuration is optimal?

Use Screaming Frog or Oncrawl in JavaScript rendering mode to crawl your AMP as Googlebot would. Extract textual content, structured tags, internal links. Compare it with an equivalent standard HTML version if you have one.

Analyze your Core Web Vitals: an AMP must score perfectly on LCP, FID, and CLS. If not, you lose the performance advantage that justified the format. Also check backlinks: if links point to non-AMP URLs you have migrated, set up clean 301 redirects.

  • Audit all on-page SEO elements of your AMP: title, meta, H1-H6, image alt
  • Implement all relevant structured data (Product, FAQ, Breadcrumb, Article, etc.)
  • Test Google rendering via Search Console and compare it with the HTML source
  • Ensure internal linking in the AMP is as comprehensive as on a standard HTML page
  • Analyze Core Web Vitals: an AMP must score green on all metrics
  • Set up 301 redirects if you have migrated non-AMP URLs to AMP
A canonical AMP becomes your only SEO identity card with Google. Every absent signal is a lost opportunity. If balancing AMP technical constraints and semantic richness seems complex to calibrate, hiring a specialized SEO agency can be wise for personalized support and to avoid costly pitfalls.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site entièrement en AMP canonical performe-t-il mieux qu'un site HTML responsive optimisé ?
Pas nécessairement. La performance AMP est un signal positif, mais si le contenu est appauvri ou les données structurées incomplètes, un HTML responsive bien optimisé peut mieux ranker. La richesse sémantique compte autant que la vitesse.
Google indexe-t-il différemment un AMP canonical selon le secteur d'activité ?
Non, la mécanique d'indexation mobile-first reste la même. En revanche, certains secteurs (e-commerce, contenus longs) souffrent plus des limitations AMP et voient leur ranking impacté si le contenu est trop réduit.
Faut-il abandonner AMP canonical si mon site est complexe ?
Pas forcément, mais évaluez le trade-off. Si vos contenus riches, interactifs ou vos modules de conversion sont impossibles à reproduire en AMP sans perte de qualité, un HTML responsive optimisé peut être plus rentable.
Les données structurées dans un AMP canonical sont-elles interprétées normalement ?
Oui, à condition qu'elles soient correctement implémentées en JSON-LD ou microdata. Testez avec l'outil de test des résultats enrichis de Google pour vérifier qu'aucune erreur ne bloque leur exploitation.
Peut-on revenir d'un canonical AMP vers une configuration HTML classique sans perte de ranking ?
Oui, si vous gérez proprement la migration : redirections 301, transfert complet des signaux SEO, conservation du contenu et des données structurées. Search Console permet de suivre la transition et d'identifier les problèmes rapidement.
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing Mobile SEO

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