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Official statement

It is crucial that the content and functionality of the mobile version of a site are equivalent to those of the desktop version to meet user expectations and ensure good rankings.
20:32
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:37 💬 EN 📅 18/10/2016 ✂ 8 statements
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Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that the content and features on mobile must match those of the desktop version to ensure good ranking. The mobile-first indexing makes this parity crucial: any content discrepancy between the two versions can negatively impact rankings. Essentially, hiding content or links on mobile is no longer a viable option if you want to maintain your positions.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize this equivalence so much?

Since the switch to mobile-first indexing, Google crawls and indexes the mobile version of your site primarily. If this version has less content, fewer internal links, or reduced features, it is this stripped-down version that serves as the reference for ranking.

The issue particularly affects sites that have long maintained a lightweight mobile version, believing they were enhancing the user experience. This approach was acceptable when Google primarily indexed the desktop version. Today, it directly penalizes your visibility.

What exactly does Google mean by "equivalence"?

Equivalence does not mean a pixel-perfect duplication of the desktop layout. It concerns three dimensions: textual content (titles, paragraphs, keywords), multimedia content (images, videos with their alt tags), and interactive features (forms, filters, navigation).

A typical example of non-equivalence is an e-commerce product page that displays all technical specifications on desktop but hides 60% of that information in a collapsible section on mobile. Google may consider that hidden content to have less weight, even if it is technically present in the DOM.

Does this rule apply to all types of websites?

Mueller's statement makes no distinction between types of sites. Both editorial sites, e-commerce platforms, and institutional sites are all subject to mobile-first indexing.

Some sectors have historically relied on simplified mobile experiences for conversion reasons. Booking sites, for example, often reduced informative content blocks on mobile to push towards the conversion funnel. This strategy now conflicts directly with Google's SEO requirements.

  • Textual Content Parity: all paragraphs, titles, and descriptions present on desktop must exist on mobile
  • Media Equivalence: images, videos, and their metadata (alt, title, schema) must be identical
  • Accessible Features: forms, filters, complete navigation menus with no excessive hiding
  • Preserved Internal Links: the mobile internal linking must reflect that of the desktop to avoid breaking the crawl
  • Consistent Structured Data: schema.org tags must be present on both versions

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?

Yes, but with a significant nuance. Site audits post-mobile-first indexing indeed show ranking losses when the content gap between mobile and desktop exceeds 20-30%. Drops are particularly marked on long-tail queries where detailed content makes a difference.

However, Google remains vague on how hidden content behind interactions (accordions, tabs) is treated. Some sites with initially hidden content rank very well, while others do not. [To be verified]: does the way in which the content is hidden (CSS display:none vs aria-hidden) play a role? Google has never provided precise technical guidelines on this.

What situations create problematic false equivalences?

Poorly implemented lazy loading is a major source of problems. If your images or content sections only load during scrolling, but Googlebot mobile does not always trigger these events, you create an impoverished mobile version unintentionally.

Another common case is "hamburger" navigation menus that hide important links. If your desktop exposes 50 links in a mega-menu and your mobile version hides 45 behind three levels of clicks, you disrupt the crawl budget and internal PageRank distribution. Google can technically crawl those links, but their algorithmic weight will be reduced.

In what cases can we allow differences?

Let's be honest: strict 100% equivalence is often counterproductive for mobile user experience. Secondary content blocks (sidebar widgets, non-essential promotional elements) can be repositioned or removed without major impacts, as long as they do not contain unique high-SEO-value content.

Google itself admits that layout adjustments are acceptable. The problem arises when essential content for understanding the topic—H2 titles, explanatory paragraphs, detailed bullet lists—disappears or becomes difficult to access on mobile. The red line: if a crawler can consider that the mobile version addresses the topic less effectively than the desktop version, you are in a risk zone.

Warning: some CMSs automatically create lightweight mobile versions without your knowledge. Check with the URL inspection tool in Search Console which version Google actually sees.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you concretely verify the equivalence of your versions?

Launch a comparative crawl with Screaming Frog or OnCrawl in desktop mode then mobile. Compare the metrics by URL: word count, number of internal links, presence of images. A gap greater than 15% on strategic pages should trigger an alert.

Use Google Search Console to identify pages that have lost positions after switching to mobile-first indexing (visible in the logs if you track your historical rankings). Cross-reference these losses with a mobile content audit: in 70% of cases, you will find a significant content gap.

What errors should you absolutely avoid?

Never hide important textual content with CSS display:none solely on mobile, especially if that content is visible on desktop. Google can technically see it, but its algorithmic weight will be reduced. Prefer well-implemented accordion or lazy loading solutions with appropriate ARIA attributes.

Avoid removing entire sections of internal linking on mobile. If your desktop footer contains 30 links to important category pages, and your mobile footer only has 5, you create a crawl asymmetry that disadvantages your deeper pages. Bots follow fewer paths on mobile, and those pages receive less PageRank.

What strategy should be adopted for content-rich editorial sites?

For editorial or e-commerce sites with detailed listings, the solution lies in a progressive architecture: display the first 2-3 paragraphs and critical information at first glance, then use accordions or expandable sections for complementary content. Everything must be present in the DOM at initial load.

Test your pages with the Google mobile inspection tool (Search Console > URL Inspection > Test Live URL > Mobile version). Check that the HTML rendering contains all your content, not just the skeleton. If sections are loaded via AJAX after interaction, they risk being ignored.

  • Crawl your mobile and desktop versions to detect content gaps (words, links, media)
  • Check that all H2/H3 desktop headers are present on mobile, even in accordions
  • Ensure that images have the same alt tags and attributes on both versions
  • Test lazy loading: Googlebot mobile must see all content without user interaction
  • Compare internal linking: strategic desktop links must exist on mobile
  • Validate structured data (schema.org) on both versions with the Rich Results Test
Aligning mobile and desktop often requires reworking information architecture and front-end templates. These optimizations touch on code, UX, and editorial decisions. If your technical team is limited or if you have hundreds of page templates to harmonize, hiring a specialized SEO agency can save you months and secure the migration without traffic loss.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le contenu caché dans des accordéons sur mobile est-il pénalisé par Google ?
Google affirme indexer le contenu des accordéons, mais son poids algorithmique peut être réduit s'il est masqué par défaut. L'impact dépend du volume de contenu caché et de son importance pour le sujet traité.
Peut-on avoir une mise en page complètement différente entre mobile et desktop ?
Oui, tant que le contenu textuel, les images, les liens et les fonctionnalités restent équivalents. Google tolère des réorganisations de layout pour l'UX mobile, mais pas la suppression de contenu stratégique.
Comment savoir si Google indexe bien ma version mobile avec tout le contenu ?
Utilisez l'outil d'inspection d'URL dans la Search Console, testez l'URL en version mobile et examinez le HTML rendu. Comparez-le avec la source desktop pour détecter les écarts.
Les sites en responsive design sont-ils automatiquement conformes à cette recommandation ?
Pas nécessairement. Même en responsive, certains développeurs cachent du contenu via CSS ou JavaScript sur mobile pour alléger l'affichage. Il faut vérifier que tout le contenu desktop reste accessible sur mobile.
Faut-il dupliquer les méta-données (title, meta description) entre mobile et desktop ?
En responsive ou dynamic serving, les méta-données sont identiques par défaut. Sur des URLs séparées (m.site.com), elles doivent être strictement équivalentes pour éviter les signaux contradictoires à Google.
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