Official statement
Other statements from this video 15 ▾
- 6:42 Faut-il vraiment laisser les liens en follow sur les pages noindex ?
- 7:55 Faut-il absolument récupérer un ancien compte Search Console pour vérifier un site ?
- 12:38 Les liens provenant de sites autoritaires sont-ils vraiment plus puissants en SEO ?
- 17:58 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter des erreurs 404 sur son site ?
- 21:45 Google Trends suffit-il vraiment pour identifier les bons mots-clés ?
- 26:12 Les mentions légales impactent-elles vraiment le référencement naturel ?
- 28:26 Les erreurs 503 font-elles vraiment disparaître vos pages de Google ?
- 35:27 Peut-on changer de gamme de produits sans ruiner son référencement ?
- 37:25 Faut-il vraiment laisser Googlebot explorer vos URL paramétriques ?
- 39:07 Les liens de navigation dupliqués sur toutes les pages nuisent-ils vraiment au SEO ?
- 43:01 Google peut-il vraiment indexer vos modifications critiques en quelques minutes ?
- 45:58 Faut-il abandonner les hreflang en HTML au profit des sitemaps XML ?
- 47:32 Les overlays JavaScript sont-ils traités comme des interstitiels intrusifs par Google ?
- 48:49 Les réseaux sociaux influencent-ils réellement le classement Google ?
- 51:21 Le contenu UGC de faible qualité peut-il plomber le classement global de votre site ?
Google allows the indexing of internal search results pages, provided they offer real user value and do not overload the server. The ideal strategy is to treat these pages as optimized category pages, featuring editorial content and relevant results. In practice, this means eliminating blank or generic results and prioritizing structured landing pages around strategic queries.
What you need to understand
Why is Google revisiting this issue now?
Internal search results pages (internal SERPs) have long been a taboo subject in SEO. For years, the official guideline was clear: block them using robots.txt or noindex. Too many e-commerce sites generated millions of worthless result URLs, saturating crawl budgets and diluting relevance.
John Mueller nuances this position. He acknowledges that some internal SERPs can address specific search intents that standard product or category pages do not cover. A typical example: an internal search for "women's red running shoes" may produce a more relevant page than a generic category for "running shoes".
What does Google mean by "similar to category pages"?
The key lies in this wording. Google does not want to index raw results generated automatically without editorial effort. What works are pages that resemble your main categories, featuring unique content, a clear structure, and pre-applied relevant filters.
Imagine the difference between a page "?q=jacket" displaying 10 results without context, and a page "winter-jackets-men" with textile introductions, size guides, and curated products. The latter has a real reason to exist in the index. The former pollutes it.
What is the technical limit mentioned by Mueller?
Mueller explicitly talks about server load. If allowing the indexing of your internal SERPs triggers massive crawling that slows down your infrastructure, that’s a dealbreaker. Google does not want to be responsible for downtime or performance degradation.
This implies setting up strict crawl budget monitoring if you choose this strategy. How many pages does Googlebot crawl per day? What is the server latency? If your response times spike after enabling indexing, you have your answer.
- User Value Mandatory: An indexable internal SERP must meet a specific search intent that your existing pages do not cover.
- No Blank Results: A page with zero or only one result has no legitimacy to be indexed.
- Minimum Editorial Content: introductory text, unique metadata, clean semantic structure.
- Technical Monitoring: crawl budget, server response times, and Googlebot crawl rates must be continuously monitored.
- Smart Canonicalization: avoid unnecessary variations (sorting order, infinite pagination) that create duplicates.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this position consistent with what we observe in the field?
Yes and no. Google is already massively indexing internal SERPs from major sites: Amazon, Cdiscount, Leboncoin. But these sites have dedicated teams that optimize each template and facet. For an average site generating thousands of filter combinations, it can be a guaranteed disaster.
I have seen e-commerce stores enable the indexing of their internal searches and end up with 80% of orphaned pages in Search Console within three weeks. [To be verified]: Google states "useful pages" but gives no specific thresholds. How many products minimum per page? What CTR is expected from the Google SERP? It's radio silence.
What are the concrete risks of this strategy?
The first danger is the cannibalization of your main pages. If Google indexes "red running shoes" (internal SERP) and you already have a category for "running shoes", which one will rank? Often, neither performs well.
The second trap is the explosion of the crawl budget. A site with 50,000 products and 200 facets can generate millions of combinations. Even limiting to 10% of the most relevant ones means an additional 100,000 URLs. Can your server handle the load? Will Googlebot crawl your new product listings or get stuck on these faceted pages?
The third pitfall relates to content freshness. An internal SERP displays results that change. An out-of-stock product disappears, a new one appears. If Google crawls the page on a Monday and a user clicks on it on Friday, the experience can be disappointing. Increased bounce rate, pogo-sticking, negative signals.
In what cases can this approach actually work?
For sites with a high volume of documented internal searches. If your Search Console shows users regularly typing "long-sleeve floral dress" and you don’t have a dedicated category, creating an optimized internal SERP makes sense.
Pure players with deep inventory can also benefit from this tactic. An auto parts site with 500,000 references cannot create a manual category for every make/model/year combination. Internal SERPs become programmatic landing pages.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify which internal SERPs deserve indexing?
Start by extracting the most frequent internal search queries from your analytics. Filter those generating at least 10 sessions per month and a minimum of 3 relevant results. This is your starting list.
Next, cross-reference with the Search Console. What queries does Google receive that could match these internal searches? If you see "waterproof hiking shoe" with 200 impressions and an average position of 45, you have a gap to fill. An optimized internal SERP can capture this traffic.
What technical errors should you absolutely avoid?
Never generate internal SERPs with fewer than 3 results. A page with one or two products offers nothing that a simple product sheet couldn’t do better. Worse, it dilutes your relevance.
Avoid chaotic URL parameters. No ?q=jacket&sort=price&color=red&size=M&page=2. Opt for clean URLs like /search/red-jacket-size-m/ with strict canonical and noindex sort parameters. Google must understand that one version holds true.
Don’t forget the unique content per page. A title "Results for jacket" and an auto-generated meta description are unacceptable. Each indexed internal SERP must have an optimized title, a compelling meta description, a structured H1, and ideally 100-150 words of editorial text.
What architecture should be established to manage this strategy?
Create an automated scoring system. Each filter combination receives a score based on: internal search volume, number of results, observed conversion rates, and existence of a competing page. Only combinations above a certain threshold (to be defined based on your vertical) are indexable.
Implement dedicated monitoring in Search Console. Create a segment for "internal SERPs" and track: indexing rates, coverage, server errors, and specific Core Web Vitals for these pages. If you see a spike in 500 errors or drifting loading times, temporarily disable indexing.
- Extract the 100 most frequent internal searches from the last quarter
- Check that each query returns at least 5 relevant results
- Create editorial content templates for each type (e.g., "brand + product type", "color + material")
- Set clean URLs in rewriting, with controlled canonical and robots meta
- Implement server caching with a short TTL (5-10 minutes) to maintain freshness
- Monitor weekly crawl budget and adjust the number of indexable pages if necessary
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je bloquer toutes mes pages de recherche interne en robots.txt ?
Comment savoir si mes SERPs internes surchargent mon serveur ?
Quelle différence entre une SERP interne indexable et une page de catégorie classique ?
Combien de résultats minimum une SERP interne doit-elle afficher pour être indexée ?
Dois-je créer un sitemap XML dédié pour mes SERPs internes indexables ?
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