Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 1:48 Googlebot peut-il vraiment crawler les événements déclenchés par l'utilisateur ?
- 2:10 Les redirections temporisées sont-elles fiables pour le référencement ?
- 3:17 Les avis Google affichés sur votre site influencent-ils vraiment votre référencement ?
- 4:25 Les données structurées incorrectes pénalisent-elles vraiment le classement Google ?
- 6:36 Fusionner plusieurs pages en une seule : bonne ou mauvaise idée pour le SEO ?
- 15:06 Faut-il vraiment limiter les mots-clés sur les pages de catégorie pour éviter une pénalité ?
- 17:49 Les backlinks vers les pages de catégorie sont-ils vraiment sans risque pour le classement ?
- 18:49 Les avis produits hébergés sur votre site peuvent-ils vraiment générer des rich snippets ?
- 23:39 Faut-il vraiment utiliser plusieurs balises H1 sur une même page ?
- 35:55 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
- 38:13 Faut-il vraiment centraliser tout son contenu sur une seule plateforme pour mieux ranker ?
- 53:37 Les Core Updates de Google modifient-elles uniquement le contenu et les backlinks ?
- 55:10 Faut-il vraiment utiliser les mots-clés exacts des requêtes utilisateurs pour ranker ?
Google states that category pages need strategic internal links to signal their importance to the engine. This approach allows for authority distribution and clarifies the site's hierarchy. Specifically: the more relevant internal links a category receives, the more Google considers it a central hub deserving of better positioning.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize category linking?
Google treats category pages as structural nodes of your information architecture. A consistent internal linking strategy enables it to map your site and identify the main thematic hubs. Without internal link signals, a category may be technically accessible but considered secondary.
The number and quality of internal links pointing to a category function as votes of importance. This is a direct application of internal PageRank: each link transfers a fraction of authority. An orphan or poorly linked category signals to Google that it is not a priority in your editorial strategy.
What differentiates a well-linked category from a neglected one?
A strategic category receives links from the main menu, the footer, breadcrumbs, and especially from related content. It benefits from varied descriptive anchors that enhance its thematic relevance. Conversely, a category buried three clicks deep without explicit anchors remains invisible to priority crawling.
The position in the hierarchy matters, but the weight of incoming links matters more. A category accessible with one click from the homepage via a strong text link will have more authority than a category accessible in two clicks but from orphan pages. Google evaluates the click distance weighted by the authority of source pages.
Does this statement imply a complete review of the entire architecture?
Not necessarily, but it requires a critical audit of the existing linking. Many sites create categories and then forget them in navigation, relying on filters or internal search. This approach does not work for Google, which needs explicit paths laid out by standard HTML links.
The challenge is to align your business intent with your linking strategy. If a category generates 30% of your revenue but receives less than 5% of your internal links, there is a structural mismatch. Google won't guess this importance—you need to signal it through a distribution of links proportional to your business priorities.
- Strategic categories should be accessible within a maximum of 2 clicks from the homepage with rich descriptive anchors.
- The number of internal links to a category should reflect its weight in your strategy—not just its alphabetical position in the menu.
- Product pages or articles should systematically link their parent category with coherent anchors to create a dense network.
- A horizontal linking between related categories enhances overall topical relevance and facilitates the discovery of adjacent content.
- Avoid generic links like "Back to categories"—prefer precise anchors that feed the semantic field.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this guideline truly reflect Google's observed behavior?
In practice, yes—but with important nuances depending on the type of site. E-commerce sites restructuring their linking towards key categories do indeed see rises in rankings, especially for competitive generic queries. Niche blogs see less impact as Google already favors their in-depth articles on long-tail queries.
The issue is that Mueller doesn't quantify anything. How many internal links are needed? From which pages? With what minimum authority? [To be verified] The lack of precise thresholds leaves the door open to all interpretations. Some SEOs over-optimize by stuffing their categories with artificial links from every footer, which dilutes the effect and may appear manipulative.
What are the risks if we apply this logic mechanically?
The main trap: creating a linking structure disconnected from the user experience. Multiplying internal links to a category just to "send a signal" without those links making contextual sense creates a disjointed user journey. Google detects these patterns via engagement metrics—high bounce rates, low time on page, quick back navigation.
Another pitfall: neglecting the quality of source pages. A link from an orphan page with zero crawl budget adds nothing. Some sites create dozens of thin content pages just to link their categories, which generates noise in the index. It's better to concentrate links from pages that are already performing well and well-crawled.
Are there cases where this rule doesn't apply?
Absolutely. Ephemeral content sites (news, events) do not benefit from the same effect as Google prioritizes freshness over structural authority. Single-product sites may not even have relevant categories to push. And certain verticals (real estate, jobs) perform better with dynamic results pages rather than static categories.
Finally, if your category lacks unique content—just a title and a list of products with no description or added value—no linking will compensate. Google ranks pages that deserve to be ranked better. Internal linking amplifies an existing signal; it does not create value ex nihilo.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be prioritized for auditing your site?
Start by mapping the current distribution of your internal links. Tools like Screaming Frog, Oncrawl, or Botify show you the number of links received by each URL. Identify strategic categories receiving fewer links than secondary pages—this is the first sign of an unbalanced linking structure.
Next, analyze the click depth: a category 4-5 clicks from the homepage is unlikely to capture crawl budget or authority. Bring them up in the hierarchy via the menu, editorial banners, or "Our worlds" sections. Also, check the coherence of anchors: rich semantic variations are preferable to a mechanical repetition of the same text.
How can you restructure your linking without disrupting user experience?
The linking should follow natural navigation paths, not constrain them. Add contextual links from your articles or product sheets to parent categories when relevant—e.g., a CTA "Discover our entire range of X" at the end of a product sheet. This strengthens the signal without cluttering the interface.
Utilize high-performing hotspots: sidebar, recommended content blocks, pillar pages that rank well. A link from a page already generating organic traffic will transmit more authority than a link from a buried page. Test different placements via A/B testing to measure impact on internal click-through rates and time spent.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Avoid falling into systematic over-linking: turning every occurrence of a keyword into a link to the relevant category makes content unreadable and dilutes the power of each link. Google values intentional editorial links, not blind automations. Limit yourself to 2-3 contextual links per page to truly relevant categories.
Another trap: creating categories just to attract SEO traffic without real user value. If you only have 3 products in a category and no editorial content to add, it's better to integrate it into a broader parent category. Google penalizes pages poor in unique content, even well-linked ones.
- Audit the current internal link distribution by type of page (categories vs products vs content)
- Identify under-linked categories with strong commercial potential and add links from high-performing pages
- Harmonize link anchors to each category with a mix of rich semantic variations
- Reduce the click depth of strategic categories to a maximum of 2 clicks from the homepage
- Create editorial content on main categories to justify their increased visibility
- Monitor the evolution of positions and organic traffic on enhanced categories over 3-6 months
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de liens internes minimum une catégorie doit-elle recevoir pour être considérée comme importante par Google ?
Les liens en JavaScript ou via des menus déroulants comptent-ils autant que les liens HTML classiques ?
Faut-il linker toutes les catégories depuis la homepage ou seulement les principales ?
Un changement de maillage interne produit des résultats en combien de temps ?
Peut-on sur-optimiser le maillage interne et déclencher une pénalité ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 53 min · published on 27/09/2019
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.