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Official statement

Google is transitioning to a mobile-first index, where the mobile version of a site will be the reference for indexing and ranking. Responsive sites have nothing to fear, while those with separate desktop and mobile versions must ensure that the mobile content is comprehensive.
2:40
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:05 💬 EN 📅 05/09/2017 ✂ 9 statements
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Other statements from this video 8
  1. 5:00 Faut-il vraiment attendre le mobile-first ou agir maintenant ?
  2. 5:40 La Search Console va-t-elle enfin devenir l'outil de monitoring tout-en-un que le SEO attendait ?
  3. 8:04 AMP et PWA sont-ils vraiment inutiles pour le référencement naturel ?
  4. 13:02 Faut-il vraiment créer une propriété HTTPS dans la Search Console dès le début de la migration ?
  5. 15:00 Faut-il vraiment conserver indéfiniment les redirections 301 après une migration HTTPS ?
  6. 21:25 Faut-il vraiment éviter robots.txt pour bloquer vos pages supprimées ?
  7. 42:52 Comment savoir si votre site a vraiment reçu une pénalité manuelle Google ?
  8. 44:20 Le CPC Google Ads influence-t-il vraiment vos classements organiques ?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google now prioritizes the mobile version of sites for ranking, even on desktop. Responsive sites pass without friction, but separate desktop/mobile setups must align their mobile content with that of the desktop. In concrete terms, any content missing from the mobile version risks disappearing from search results.

What you need to understand

What does “mobile-first” really mean for indexing?

Until now, Google used the desktop version of a site as the primary reference for crawling, indexing, and ranking pages. With mobile-first indexing, it's exactly the opposite: mobile Googlebot becomes the default crawler.

Your site's mobile version now determines what will be indexed and how your pages will rank, including in desktop results. If your mobile version lacks certain content, structures, or signals present on desktop, Google simply won’t see them.

Why is Google making this change now?

The reality of traffic has shifted. The majority of searches now come from mobile devices, and continuing to prioritize desktop versions for indexing no longer made sense.

Google wants its index to reflect what the majority of users actually see. Indexing a rich desktop version while mobile users access a stripped-down version created a gap between the promise of the index and the real experience.

What technical setups are affected?

Responsive sites, which serve the same HTML adjusted via CSS, are not impacted by this change. Since the mobile and desktop content is identical, mobile-first indexing does not change anything for them.

On the other hand, sites with separate URLs (m.example.com vs www.example.com) or dynamic serving (different HTML based on user-agent) must ensure that both versions offer equivalent content. Any differences in content, structured data, or internal linking between the versions become critical.

  • Responsive sites: no changes required, the content is identical across all devices
  • Separate URLs (m.): check content parity between the two versions and the implementation of rel=alternate/canonical tags
  • Dynamic serving: ensure that the mobile HTML contains all essential elements present on desktop
  • Hidden content on mobile: tabs, accordions, and hidden content remain indexed if they are in the DOM
  • Structured data: must be present and identical on the mobile version

SEO Expert opinion

Does this mobile-first transition really change the game in practice?

For the majority of sites, the impact has been minimal. Responsive sites, which now represent the overwhelming majority of new implementations, have felt no seismic shift. The real question concerns legacy sites with separate setups.

Significant drops were only observed on sites that practiced intentional depletion of mobile content: truncated texts, removed images, entire sections absent. These practices, once common to "optimize" mobile performance, have become toxic overnight.

Is Google consistent in how it treats hidden content?

This is a point that deserves clarification. Google has claimed for years that content in tabs or accordions is indexed normally on mobile. Our tests confirm that content present in the DOM, even if hidden by default, is crawled and indexed.

But the missing nuance here is: what weight do these hidden contents actually receive compared to content that is immediately visible? [To be verified] Google remains vague on this point. Field experience suggests a slight disadvantage in relevance, without this content being ignored.

What are the most common misinterpretations?

Many believed that they should now optimize exclusively for mobile and that the desktop version no longer mattered. This is false. The mobile version determines indexing, but the desktop experience remains critical for users accessing it.

Another frequent confusion: thinking that "mobile-first" means "mobile-only". No. Google indexes the mobile version, but ranks based on many other signals, including user experience on the actual device used for the search. A site can be indexed through its mobile version while providing an exceptional desktop experience that boosts its ranking for desktop queries.

Warning: If you are using aggressive lazy loading on mobile, check that Googlebot can access the images and content. Poorly crafted JavaScript implementations can make content invisible to the mobile crawler while displaying it to real users.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I check if my site is ready for mobile-first?

The first step: check the Search Console and verify the message about migrating to mobile-first indexing for your domain. Google sends a notification when a site actually switches.

Then, use the “URL Inspection” tool to compare what mobile Googlebot sees versus what you think you are serving. Discrepancies between the expected rendering and what Google actually sees are often revealing of JavaScript issues or blocked resources.

What corrective actions can I implement quickly?

If you have separate URLs, audit the content parity between desktop and mobile page by page, at least for your strategic pages. Texts, images, videos, structured data, internal linking: everything must be present on mobile.

For dynamic serving sites, test with different user agents. Ensure that the mobile HTML contains all essential metadata: title tags, meta descriptions, hreflang, canonical, Open Graph. These elements are often overlooked on lighter mobile versions.

Should I completely redesign a separate desktop/mobile site?

If you are still on an m.example.com architecture, migrating to responsive is the best long-term investment. Maintaining two distinct versions is costly in development, QA, and SEO risks.

That said, if a redesign isn’t feasible immediately, focus on strict equality in mobile content. Add what’s missing, even if it slightly degrades mobile performance in the short term. It’s better to have a complete mobile version that is 100ms slower than a fast mobile version that is invisible in the index.

  • Compare page by page the mobile vs desktop content on the 20 most strategic pages
  • Check that the structured data (JSON-LD) is identical on both versions
  • Test the lazy loading of images with the URL Inspection tool in the Search Console
  • Ensure that critical internal links are present on mobile
  • Validate that the robots.txt file doesn’t block the crawl of essential resources for mobile rendering
  • Ensure that strategic buttons and calls-to-action are visible and clickable on mobile
The mobile-first index is not a technical revolution for modern sites, but a clear signal: mobile has become the norm. Auditing your content parity and migrating to responsive if you haven't done so already are the top two priorities. These optimizations often require coordination between technical, editorial, and SEO teams. If the complexity of this transition seems difficult to manage internally, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can speed up diagnosis and secure migration without traffic loss.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Mon site responsive doit-il faire quelque chose de particulier pour le mobile-first ?
Non, si votre site est réellement responsive et sert le même HTML à tous les devices, vous êtes déjà conforme. Le mobile-first n'impacte que les sites avec versions séparées ou contenus différents selon les devices.
Le contenu dans des onglets ou accordéons sur mobile est-il toujours indexé ?
Oui, tant que le contenu est présent dans le DOM HTML. Google crawle et indexe les contenus masqués par défaut via CSS ou JavaScript, mais ils peuvent recevoir un poids légèrement inférieur aux contenus immédiatement visibles.
Que se passe-t-il si ma version mobile a moins de contenu que la version desktop ?
Le contenu absent de la version mobile ne sera pas indexé par Google, même pour les recherches desktop. Vous risquez une perte de visibilité sur les mots-clés associés aux sections manquantes.
Les images lazy-loadées sur mobile sont-elles correctement indexées ?
Ça dépend de l'implémentation. Si le lazy-loading repose sur des techniques modernes (loading="lazy" natif), oui. Si c'est du JavaScript custom qui attend un scroll, Googlebot peut rater les images en dehors du viewport initial.
Dois-je abandonner mon architecture m.example.com pour passer en responsive ?
C'est la meilleure solution à long terme pour simplifier la maintenance et éviter les risques de désynchronisation de contenu. Si la migration n'est pas possible immédiatement, assurez-vous au minimum que les deux versions ont un contenu strictement identique.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Mobile SEO

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