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Official statement

Google does not always index all pages of a site, especially a new site. Indexing can be selective if Google doubts the added value of certain pages.
4:47
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 44:01 💬 EN 📅 10/01/2019 ✂ 20 statements
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📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google selectively indexes new pages, especially on newly created sites. If the search engine questions the added value of a page, it may choose not to include it in its index. This statement confirms that indexing is no longer a binary process but a qualitative filter applied beforehand.

What you need to understand

Does Google really apply a qualitative filter before indexing?

John Mueller's statement breaks a long-held misconception: crawlability does not automatically mean indexing. Google can explore a page, understand its content, and intentionally decide not to add it to its index.

This behavior intensifies on new sites that have not yet established their authority. The engine applies a preventive filter: why spend indexing resources on pages whose relevance is not proven? This approach conserves processing budget and maintains the quality of the index.

What triggers this refusal of indexing?

Mueller mentions doubt about the added value but remains deliberately vague about the specific criteria. It is known that Google analyzes signals such as content originality, depth of treatment, and informational structure.

On a new site, Google takes a wait-and-see approach. It observes engagement signals, user behavior coming from other channels, and community SEO reactions. Indexing becomes progressive, almost meritocratic.

Does this selectivity affect all types of pages?

Pages with low differentiation are the first victims: generic product sheets, poorly developed categories, and short editorial content without a specific angle. Google favors pages that provide a unique or comprehensive answer.

New e-commerce sites feel this impact sharply: 30% to 60% of their catalog may remain off-index for weeks. Young blogs see their surface-level articles ignored while detailed pillar content gets indexed quickly.

  • Selective indexing: Google can crawl without indexing, it's a strategic choice of the engine
  • New sites particularly affected: the absence of established authority triggers a stricter filter
  • Added value as a central criterion: originality and depth weigh in the indexing decision
  • No temporal guarantee: a page refused today may be indexed later if the site gains credibility
  • Impact on crawl budget: this selectivity frees resources for pages deemed priority

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, absolutely. SEO practitioners have been observing this indexing slowdown on new domains for several months. This is not a classic penalty but a default behavior. Google tests first, indexes second.

However, Mueller remains vague about the trigger thresholds [To be verified]. How long does this phase of selectivity last? What specific signals shift a page from "crawled not indexed" status to "indexed"? Official answers are sorely lacking in numerical data.

What nuances should be added to this rule?

The age of the site is just one factor among others. A new domain with powerful backlinks can escape this filter. Conversely, an old site that has been left idle and then relaunched with mediocre content will suffer the same treatment as a beginner.

The phrasing "doubt about added value" leaves room for interpretation. Google does not say it systematically analyzes quality, but that it applies probabilistic heuristics. Excellent content may be temporarily refused if contextual signals are weak.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

Hot news pages often escape the filter, even on new sites. Google rapidly indexes content that meets an immediate user demand. Content related to ongoing events benefits from expedited processing.

Sites that quickly demonstrate recognized expertise can also bypass this mechanism. A new media outlet launched by established journalists, with a solid referring domain, will see its content indexed normally. Authority partially transfers.

Caution: this selectivity does not only affect new sites. An established site undergoing a massive redesign or radically changing its theme may also fall under this filter. Google reevaluates overall relevance when the editorial consistency shifts abruptly.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to maximize indexing?

Focus your efforts on depth of treatment rather than volume. It's better to publish 10 comprehensive and differentiated pages than 100 generic listings. Google is more likely to index content that looks unlike anything else in its index.

Build early external signals: mentions on social media, citations in specialized newsletters, links from niche forums. These indicators prove that your content is of interest beyond just the crawling bot. Google observes these engagement markers.

What mistakes should be avoided during the launch phase?

Do not publish your entire catalog at once. A massive influx of pages simultaneously on a new domain systematically triggers the filter. Google interprets this behavior as potentially spammy. Stagger your releases.

Avoid template content where only a few words change from one page to another. Google spots these patterns and considers the overall content lacking added value. Vary the structures, angles, and depth of each page.

How can you check if your site is impacted by this filter?

Compare in Search Console the number of pages "Crawled – currently not indexed" with the number of pages "Indexed". If the first number exceeds 40% of the total crawled, you are experiencing this selection mechanism.

Analyze server logs: pages crawled regularly but never indexed signal a qualitative refusal, not a technical problem. If Googlebot returns but the page remains off-index, it is a deliberate choice by the engine.

  • Prioritize 20 ultra-detailed pillar pages rather than 200 average pages at launch
  • Generate external signals (mentions, shares) even before requesting indexing
  • Stagger publications over a minimum of 4-6 weeks for large catalogs
  • Differentiating each page with a unique angle, not just different keywords
  • Monitor the "Crawled not indexed" / "Indexed" ratio in Search Console each week
  • Manually request re-indexing through the Search Console tool after improving content
Selective indexing radically transforms the SEO launch strategy. Volume is no longer sufficient; demonstrating value becomes a prerequisite. These adjustments require a detailed understanding of Google's signals and precise editorial coordination. If you are launching a new site or massively redesigning an existing domain, specialized SEO support can save you months of indexing blockage by identifying priority content and the signals to activate from the start to convince Google of your pages' relevance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps Google applique-t-il ce filtre sur un nouveau site ?
La durée varie selon les signaux d'autorité captés. Un site peut rester sous surveillance sélective pendant 3 à 12 mois. L'acquisition de backlinks de qualité et les signaux d'engagement accélèrent la levée du filtre.
Une page refusée aujourd'hui peut-elle être indexée plus tard sans modification ?
Oui, absolument. Si le site gagne en autorité globale, Google peut revisiter et indexer des pages précédemment ignorées. L'amélioration du contenu accélère ce processus mais n'est pas toujours nécessaire.
L'outil d'inspection d'URL force-t-il l'indexation malgré le filtre ?
Non, pas systématiquement. Demander l'indexation via Search Console ne contourne pas le filtre qualitatif. Google peut explorer la page suite à votre demande mais refuser de l'indexer si elle ne répond pas aux critères de valeur ajoutée.
Ce mécanisme touche-t-il aussi les sites établis qui publient beaucoup ?
Oui, dans une moindre mesure. Un site ancien qui publie massivement du contenu faible peut voir ses nouvelles pages filtrées. L'autorité historique protège partiellement mais ne garantit plus l'indexation automatique.
Les pages en noindex puis passées en index subissent-elles aussi ce filtre ?
Oui. Retirer un noindex ne garantit pas l'indexation immédiate. Google réévalue la page comme s'il la découvrait et applique les mêmes critères de valeur ajoutée qu'à une page neuve.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO

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