Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:08 Les doorway pages sont-elles toujours pénalisées par Google en SEO ?
- 4:44 Le duplicate content peut-il vraiment vous pénaliser si c'est vous la victime du vol ?
- 6:18 Les pages sans résultat tuent-elles votre référencement naturel ?
- 7:10 Penguin peut-il pénaliser vos liens internes ?
- 14:18 Panda et Penguin fonctionnent-ils vraiment de manière indépendante pour évaluer votre site ?
- 17:34 Le contenu masqué en JavaScript compromet-il vraiment votre indexation Google ?
- 26:18 Hreflang suffit-il vraiment à éviter le duplicate content international ?
- 35:31 Comment forcer Google à indexer vos modifications de contenu en quelques minutes au lieu de plusieurs jours ?
- 75:28 Pourquoi vos positions Google varient-elles chaque jour sans que vous ayez rien changé ?
Google confirms that JavaScript-loaded comments, including historical systems like Google+, are now indexed without issues. Natural repetition of terms in these sections does not trigger a keyword stuffing penalty. Essentially, you can keep your JS comment systems without fearing an algorithmic filter, but you still need to implement anti-spam moderation.
What you need to understand
How does this clarification on JavaScript comments change the game?
For years, JavaScript-generated content remained invisible to Googlebot. Comments loaded dynamically via plugins like Disqus, Facebook Comments, or the old Google+ system evaded indexing. This created a gap: thousands of potentially relevant words never contributed to SEO.
Mueller addresses two points here. First, Googlebot now correctly indexes these JavaScript comments. The bot's rendering capability has evolved to the point that these contents no longer require server-side rendering to be considered. Second, the repetition of terms in this area will generally not be interpreted as keyword stuffing.
What does ‘generally no keyword stuffing’ mean in practice?
The nuance matters. Google acknowledges that comments naturally contain repetitions: readers quote the article, reuse its terms, discuss the same concepts. Unlike written text, where each occurrence is controlled, a comment thread organically accumulates the same keywords.
The algorithm exhibits contextual tolerance. If ten people comment on an article about “backlinks,” repeating that term twenty times, Google does not view this as manipulation. This tolerance applies to unintentional repetitions, not to deliberate strategies where comments are stuffed with keywords via fake profiles.
Do JavaScript comments impact ranking like regular content?
Here, Mueller is vague. He confirms indexing, not the weight attributed to this content. Comments enrich the semantics of a page, but Google likely treats them with a different coefficient than the main editorial content.
In practice, comments mostly contribute to long-tail terms: natural expressions, user questions, related vocabulary. They can trigger appearances on ultra-specific queries. However, no one has ever gained a position on a competitive query solely thanks to their comments section.
- Googlebot indexes JavaScript comments without requiring specific server rendering
- The repetition of terms in these sections does not trigger a keyword stuffing filter if it remains natural
- The SEO weight of these comments is likely lower than the main editorial content
- Comments mainly contribute to semantic coverage and long-tail queries
- Anti-spam moderation remains essential despite algorithmic tolerance
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes, concerning indexing. For several years, tests have shown that Googlebot correctly executes JavaScript on the majority of sites. Tools like Google Search Console even display a ‘rendered’ view that proves this capability. Comments from Disqus, Facebook Comments, or custom JS solutions do indeed appear in the index.
Regarding tolerance for keyword stuffing, it’s less documented. We lack concrete cases of penalties related to comments. But this absence of evidence does not prove the absence of risk. [To verify]: no public data quantifies precisely the threshold of tolerance or the situations where this “general tolerance” no longer applies.
In what cases might this tolerance not apply?
Mueller uses “generally,” and this word is there for a reason. If your comments section becomes a blatant spam—fake profiles repeating optimized anchors, automatically generated comments stuffed with keywords—the tolerance disappears. Google detects unnatural patterns.
Another problematic case: sites that artificially generate their own comments to manipulate semantic density. If the editorial team posts under pseudonyms dozens of keyword-stuffed comments, you’ve crossed the line. The manipulative intent changes everything. Tolerance applies to authentic contributions from real users, not to disguised greyhat tactics.
Should comments be considered a top SEO lever?
Let’s be honest: no. Comments enrich an existing page, they don’t save it. If your main content is weak, a hundred comments won’t change anything. The effect remains marginal compared to the quality of the editorial text, backlinks, and technical structure.
However, completely neglecting this area would be a mistake. On sites with a real active community, comments naturally generate related vocabulary, questions you hadn’t anticipated, useful reformulations. This semantic richness can trigger impressions on peripheral queries. The impact exists, but it remains secondary in the overall equation.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you prioritize a JavaScript or server comment solution?
The answer depends on your priorities. From a pure SEO perspective, both approaches are now equal since Googlebot renders JS correctly. A server solution (native WordPress comments, for example) remains slightly more reliable: zero risk of rendering failure, instant loading for older bots.
However, a JS solution like Disqus or Commento offers more advanced social features, centralized moderation, and sometimes a better UX. If your community is active, these advantages may prevail. Just ensure in Search Console that your comments appear in the rendered view. If they do not, a technical issue is blocking indexing.
How can you moderate comments without harming SEO?
Anti-spam moderation remains essential. Even if Google tolerates natural repetitions, allowing hundreds of automatically generated comments will sooner or later create a problem. Use tools like Akismet, CleanTalk, or strict rules (email validation, discreet captcha).
Systematically remove comments containing suspicious outgoing links. These links dilute your internal PageRank and can pollute your outgoing link profile. On WordPress, set the comments so that links are “nofollow” by default. Better yet: completely disable URLs in comments if your community doesn’t need them.
What should you check on your own site?
Start with a rendering test in Google Search Console. Inspect a URL with active comments and compare the ‘crawled’ view to the ‘rendered’ view. If comments do not appear in the latter, your JS implementation is problematic. Also check that your comments are not blocked by robots.txt or an unfortunate JS directive.
Next, audit the quality of indexed comments. Perform a site:votredomaine.com search with specific terms present only in the comments. If they appear in Google snippets, indexing is working. If you notice spam in those snippets, reinforce moderation immediately.
- Check in Search Console that comments appear in the rendered view
- Configure comments links to be “nofollow” or disable them
- Implement automated anti-spam moderation (Akismet, CleanTalk)
- Regularly audit Google snippets for undesirable content
- Test indexing with a site:yourdomain.com + specific term from comments query
- Avoid artificially generating keyword-stuffed comments
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les commentaires Disqus sont-ils bien indexés par Google ?
Peut-on être pénalisé si les commentaires contiennent trop de fois le même mot-clé ?
Faut-il mettre les liens dans les commentaires en nofollow ?
Les commentaires améliorent-ils le ranking sur des requêtes concurrentielles ?
Doit-on désactiver les commentaires si on n'a pas le temps de modérer ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 20/06/2014
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