Official statement
Other statements from this video 32 ▾
- 1:07 How does Google actually determine which pages to crawl first on your site?
- 2:07 Are category pages really crawled more by Google?
- 5:21 Should you really optimize product page titles for Google or for users?
- 5:22 Can multiple pages really share the same H1 without risking SEO?
- 6:54 Are mouseover links truly crawlable by Google?
- 9:54 Does Googlebot really follow hidden internal links that appear on hover?
- 10:53 Should you block JavaScript scripts in your robots.txt?
- 13:07 How can you make the most of Search Console to optimize your mobile SEO strategy?
- 16:01 Should you really make your JavaScript files accessible to Googlebot?
- 18:06 Should you really keep your Disavow file even with dead domains?
- 21:00 Can Google Really Handle JavaScript Indexing Effectively?
- 21:45 How can you isolate SEO traffic from a subdomain or mobile version in Search Console?
- 23:24 How many articles should you display per category page for optimal SEO?
- 23:32 Does the canonical tag really transfer as much signal as a 301 redirect?
- 29:00 Is duplicate content really a top SEO concern we should address?
- 29:12 Does the Disavow file really nullify all disavowed backlinks?
- 29:32 Do canonical tags really transmit SEO signals like a 301 redirect?
- 30:26 Should you really clean your Disavow file of dead and redirected URLs?
- 33:21 Is JavaScript really a challenge for Google’s crawling?
- 40:50 Is it really necessary to switch your site to HTTPS for SEO?
- 41:30 Does HTTPS really enhance your SEO, or is it just a Google myth?
- 45:25 Does Google really remove misleading pages or does it simply downgrade them?
- 46:12 Should you really avoid using canonical tags on paginated pages?
- 47:32 How can you speed up the deindexing of orphan pages that drag down your Google index?
- 48:06 Does duplicate content really affect your site's crawl budget?
- 53:30 Do Google spam reports really trigger actions?
- 57:26 Does descriptive content on category pages really solve the indexing issue?
- 59:12 Do empty category pages really harm indexing?
- 63:20 Should you really rewrite all product descriptions to rank in e-commerce?
- 70:51 Can Google merge your international sites if the content is too similar?
- 77:06 Should you really avoid canonicals pointing to page 1 on paginated series?
- 80:32 Should you really rely on 404 errors to clean up Google’s index of orphaned URLs?
Google recommends actively managing category pages with few products to prevent them from resembling 404 pages. Setting noindex becomes a strategic option when these pages offer no real value to users. The critical threshold remains to be defined: how many products justify indexing, and what signals does Google use to determine that a page is 'unhelpful'?
What you need to understand
Why does Google compare these pages to 404 pages?
An empty or nearly empty category page generates a negative signal similar to a 404: the user lands on a page that does not fulfill their search intent. They seek products, find none, and leave.
Google detects this user behavior through engagement metrics: time spent, bounce rate, immediate clicks back to the SERPs. A category with 2 products on 10 possible pages offers a degraded experience that clutters the index.
What constitutes a 'sparsely populated' category according to Google?
The statement remains deliberately vague on the exact threshold. We talk about 'very few items', but are 3 products enough? 5? 10?
The answer depends on the context of the category. A category for 'vintage Swiss diving watches' with 3 products may be legitimate if it is a niche. A category for 'women's shoes' with 3 products on a general e-commerce site is objectively poor.
What does 'unhelpful' mean for the search engine?
Google assesses the usefulness of a page on several dimensions: unique content, user experience, relevance to targeted queries. An empty or nearly empty category page does not offer any differentiating content.
It dilutes the crawl budget, forces Google to explore URLs with no value, and can lead to an overall devaluation of site quality. The engine prefers to focus its index on pages that genuinely provide value.
- Negative user signal: high bounce rate, short time spent, immediate back clicks
- Crawl budget dilution: wasted resources on worthless pages
- Panda risk: accumulation of weak pages degrades the overall site perception
- Missed opportunity: these URLs capture crawl that could go to high-performing pages
- Artificial indexing: multiplying pages to increase entry points no longer works
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with what we observe in the field?
Yes, and for a long time. E-commerce sites that leave hundreds of empty categories indexed suffer from Panda penalties or massive de-indexing. This isn't new, but Google is formalizing a practice it has already penalized.
What changes is the transparency of the recommendation. Previously, we were guessing. Now, Google clearly says: if it's empty, cut the indexing. Still, 'empty' is not defined, and that's where the issue arises.
What nuances should be applied to this rule?
Noindex is not the only option. A 301 redirect to the parent category or to a thematic hub page may be more relevant if the category is structurally outdated.
Furthermore, a category with 2 products can be temporarily strategic: a new range in the launch phase, a seasonal category during inter-season. In this case, maintaining indexing with rich editorial content (guides, comparisons) may be justified.
[To verify] Google does not specify if the number of products is the only criterion. Is a category with 5 products but 1500 words of well-structured editorial content considered 'unhelpful'? Probably not, but there is no official data.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Ultra-specialized niche sites may legitimately have categories with few products. If your site sells exclusively parts for 70s Moog synthesizers, a category with 3 products is not abnormal.
The same applies to luxury catalogs or rare products: a category for 'Patek Philippe complication watches' with 4 references at €200k each is not a weak page. Context and quality of associated content are paramount.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do practically on an e-commerce site?
First step: audit all category pages and identify those with less than X products (you need to define your own threshold based on your market). Extract a crawl from Screaming Frog or Oncrawl with the number of products per category.
Next, segment these categories into three groups: those that are temporarily empty (seasonal, out of stock), those that are structurally weak (poor architecture), and those that are strategic despite the low volume (niche, luxury, launch).
What mistakes should be avoided in managing noindex?
Do not switch everything to noindex by default without thinking. An empty category today can be filled tomorrow, and noindex may remain in place by oversight. Implement a monitoring process.
Another pitfall: noindex can disrupt internal linking if these categories are linked from the menu or important pages. You create dead ends. Before noindexing, check that these pages are not essential navigation hubs.
How can you verify that your management is optimal?
Use Google Search Console to track indexed versus discovered pages. If you have 500 discovered categories but only 200 indexed, that’s a good sign: Google is filtering. If everything is indexed despite empty pages, you have a problem.
Also monitor Core Web Vitals and engagement metrics on these pages: if a category with 4 products has an 85% bounce rate and a 12-second duration, it pollutes your overall quality. Noindex or enrich.
- Crawl your site and extract the number of products per category
- Define a critical threshold suitable for your market (e.g. less than 5 products = alert)
- Segment weak categories: temporary, structural, or strategic?
- Noindex or redirect structurally weak categories with no added value
- Enrich strategic but sparsely populated categories with editorial content
- Implement monthly monitoring of the number of products per category
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de produits minimum faut-il pour indexer une page de catégorie ?
Le noindex est-il la seule solution pour les catégories peu peuplées ?
Une catégorie temporairement vide doit-elle être mise en noindex ?
Le noindex sur des catégories impacte-t-il le maillage interne ?
Peut-on indexer une catégorie avec 3 produits si on ajoute du contenu éditorial ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 24/08/2017
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