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Official statement

If you have violated Google’s webmaster guidelines or if your site has been hacked, it’s a good time to submit a reconsideration request after resolving the issue.
0:31
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 6:47 💬 EN 📅 05/08/2011 ✂ 4 statements
Watch on YouTube (0:31) →
Other statements from this video 3
  1. 0:38 Comment rédiger une demande de réexamen Google qui passe vraiment ?
  2. 3:38 Comment Google traite-t-il vraiment vos demandes de réexamen après une pénalité manuelle ?
  3. 5:14 Comment Google informe-t-il réellement les webmasters après une demande de réexamen ?
📅
Official statement from (14 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that a reconsideration request is warranted only in two specific cases: a manual violation of guidelines or confirmed hacking. This tool is not a recourse for classic traffic drops or algorithm updates. Essentially, submitting a reconsideration request without prior manual action is not only unnecessary but can also slow down the processing of legitimate cases.

What you need to understand

What is a reconsideration request and when should it be used?

The reconsideration request is a form available in Search Console that allows you to inform Google that an identified issue has been resolved. It is not intended for all webmasters but only for those who have received a manual action notification in their console.

This statement emphasizes a fundamental principle that is often misunderstood: this tool is not a magic button to regain lost rankings. It applies to two specific technical scenarios that involve either a human intervention at Google or a security breach.

What are the two legitimate situations mentioned by Google?

The first pertains to violations of webmaster guidelines: content spam, artificial links, cloaking, deceptive redirects, hidden text. These violations trigger visible manual actions in Search Console with an explicit label of the detected issue.

The second situation covers hacked sites: injection of malicious content, redirects to third-party sites, automatically generated doorway pages. Google notifies these security issues through specific messages that require a complete technical cleanup before any reconsideration request.

Why does Google insist on resolving the issue first?

Submitting a reconsideration request without first correcting the underlying issue is counterproductive. Google’s teams manually review each request, and a site that hasn’t been cleaned up leads to an immediate rejection, delaying the actual processing by several weeks.

This insistence also reflects an operational reality: Google receives a significant volume of unjustified requests from webmasters who think a reconsideration can overturn an algorithmic penalty. This is never the case. Algorithm updates (Helpful Content, Core Updates) are not resolved by a reconsideration request but through improving content and the site.

  • A reconsideration request is only valid in the presence of a notified manual action in Search Console.
  • Traffic drops without notification never justify any reconsideration request.
  • The cleanup must be thorough and documented before submission.
  • An premature request delays processing and may create a negative history.
  • Hacking requires both a technical cleanup and a strengthened security to prevent recurrence.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, and it aligns perfectly with feedback from practitioners. Reconsideration requests work when they meet the stated criteria, but the failure rate remains high because many webmasters use them as a lifeline after a traffic drop that is not linked to a manual action.

What is never explicitly stated: the processing time varies tremendously depending on the severity of the initial violation and the quality of the cleanup. A site that has engaged in massive link spam may wait several months even after a complete fix, while a one-time hack may be lifted in a few days.

What nuances should be added to this official guidance?

Google never specifies what it considers a sufficient correction. On a hacked site with 5000 injected pages, should all be removed or only the main ones? In practice, a radical approach works better: complete deletion, temporary disallowing via robots.txt, then gradual reopening.

For guideline violations, the gray area remains significant. Should a site that has bought links remove all of them or only the most toxic? [To be verified] Google never provides a numerical threshold, which leaves practitioners in uncertainty. Experience shows that an 80% cleanup often fails, while a 95%+ cleanup with detailed documentation significantly increases the chances of success.

In which cases is this procedure strictly useless?

Let’s be clear: if your Search Console shows no manual actions, don’t waste time with a reconsideration request. Algorithms like Penguin, Panda (integrated into the core), or Helpful Content never generate manual actions and cannot be addressed through this procedure.

Another common case: sites that have disappeared due to indexing issues (noindex tag, blocking robots.txt, server error) or a failed technical migration. These situations fall under classic technical fixes, not a reconsideration request. Traffic returns as soon as the issue is resolved, without human intervention from Google.

Note: submitting multiple reconsideration requests in a short time for the same issue can be interpreted as spam and further delay processing. One well-documented request is better than three hasty attempts.

Practical impact and recommendations

What exactly should be done before submitting a request?

The first step: check the Manual Actions section in Search Console. If it states 'No issues detected', there’s no need to go further. The reconsideration request does not apply to your case. Focus on analyzing Core Web Vitals, content quality, or backlinks if your traffic has dropped.

If a manual action is notified, document each correction made. Google explicitly asks what you have done to resolve the issue. A vague response like 'I cleaned up bad links' will be rejected. List removed URLs, domains disavowed using the Disavow Tool, modified pages with before/after.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided when submitting?

Never submit a reconsideration request until the cleanup is 100% complete. Google checks manually and will immediately detect any remnants of spam or hacking. An initial rejection complicates subsequent requests as you create a negative history.

Another classic error: using an emotional or accusatory tone in the form. Stay factual, technical, and provide concrete evidence that the issue is resolved. Phrases like 'it wasn’t my fault' or 'my competitor sabotaged me' are useless. Google assesses the current compliance, not past circumstances.

How to ensure that the cleanup is truly complete?

For a hacked site, run a complete crawl with Screaming Frog or Sitebulb looking for suspicious patterns: unusual URL parameters, pharmaceutical or casino keywords in titles, unwanted 301 redirects. Also check .htaccess files, wp-config.php, and all WordPress plugins for potential backdoors.

For guideline violations, audit all backlinks with Ahrefs, Majestic, or Search Console. Identify low-authority domains, over-optimized anchors, private link networks. Create a comprehensive disavow file and upload it before the reconsideration request. Then wait 2-3 weeks for Google to process it before submitting your request.

  • Check for a notified manual action in Search Console.
  • Document each correction with URLs, screenshots, disavow files.
  • Wait for the complete processing of the Disavow file (minimum 2-3 weeks).
  • Fully crawl the site to detect any remnants of hacking or spam.
  • Write a factual and technical explanation in the reconsideration form.
  • Only submit one request per issue, never multiple follow-ups.
The Google reconsideration request remains a powerful tool but is strictly reserved for notified manual actions and hacks. Its effectiveness relies on thorough cleanup, precise documentation, and sufficient patience for Google to process the request. These technical interventions can be complex, especially on sites that have accumulated several years of toxic backlinks or have experienced recurrent attacks. If you lack the time or internal expertise to conduct this in-depth audit, engaging a specialized SEO agency can help you obtain an accurate diagnosis and an appropriate cleanup strategy, maximizing your chances of quickly lifting the penalty.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps Google met-il pour traiter une demande de réexamen ?
Le délai varie de quelques jours à plusieurs semaines selon la gravité du problème et la qualité du nettoyage. Un piratage simple peut être traité en 3-5 jours, tandis qu'une violation grave de guidelines peut prendre 4 à 8 semaines.
Peut-on soumettre plusieurs demandes de réexamen si la première est rejetée ?
Oui, mais uniquement après avoir corrigé les problèmes identifiés dans la réponse de rejet. Soumettre une nouvelle demande sans modification supplémentaire est contre-productif et ralentit le traitement.
Une demande de réexamen peut-elle annuler les effets d'une mise à jour algorithmique ?
Non, jamais. Les demandes de réexamen ne concernent que les actions manuelles notifiées dans la Search Console. Les pénalités algorithmiques se corrigent en améliorant le site, pas via ce formulaire.
Faut-il utiliser le Disavow Tool avant de soumettre une demande de réexamen pour liens artificiels ?
C'est fortement recommandé. Google attend que vous ayez tenté de supprimer ou désavouer les liens toxiques avant d'examiner votre demande. Un fichier de désaveu bien construit augmente significativement les chances de succès.
Que se passe-t-il si on soumet une demande de réexamen sans action manuelle préalable ?
La demande sera ignorée ou rejetée immédiatement. Google ne traite ces demandes que lorsqu'une action manuelle est active dans la Search Console. Sans notification, le formulaire n'a aucun effet.
🏷 Related Topics

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