Official statement
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Google claims that its algorithm no longer relies on the brute frequency of keywords and can penalize pages that overdo it. For SEOs, this means rethinking writing to favor natural language that aligns with search intent. The challenge remains to determine the fine line between legitimate optimization and over-optimization, as Google provides no specific thresholds.
What you need to understand
Why does Google place such a strong emphasis on natural text?
Early Google algorithms operated on lexical matching: the more a keyword appeared, the more relevant the page was deemed. This binary logic was quickly exploited by stuffing tactics, resulting in poor search results.
Since the introduction of RankBrain and BERT, Google analyzes semantic context instead of just counting occurrences. The engine now understands synonyms, variations, and the hidden intent behind a query. Text that repeats "women's running shoes" 15 times will seem suspicious, while content that naturally discusses "sneakers for female runners" is favored.
What does "natural text" really mean for Google?
Google never clearly defines this term, leaving a frustrating gray area for practitioners. Natural text is theoretically what a human would write without SEO ulterior motives, featuring lexical variations, smooth phrases, and real added value.
The issue: no one writes without intent. A web writer discussing a commercial subject will naturally repeat certain technical terms or products. The line between legitimate optimization and stuffing becomes blurred, and Google provides no numerical thresholds.
Does the algorithm really detect keyword stuffing?
Yes, through several signals. First, the analysis of abnormal density of a term compared to the corpus of similar pages. If 95% of competing pages use a keyword 3 times and you place it 20 times, a red flag is raised.
Next, the over-optimization patterns: exact repetition of the same word group ("SEO agency Paris" everywhere), lack of semantic variations, weird syntax to force the inclusion of a query. Google also uses behavioral signals: if users bounce significantly because the text seems robotic, it indicates poor quality.
- Google analyzes semantic context, not just keyword frequency
- No official keyword density threshold is provided
- Behavioral signals (bounce rate, time on page) enhance detection
- Lexical variations and synonyms are now valued
- Flagrant stuffing can lead to an algorithmic penalty
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement truly reflect the reality on the ground?
Yes and no. For competitive queries, it is observed that keyword-stuffed pages stagnate or disappear. However, in less monitored niches, sites with obvious over-optimization continue to rank smoothly. Google does not have the same detection capabilities everywhere.
I have seen e-commerce sites degrade their positions after repeating their product keywords in every variation of listing. Conversely, blogs that write naturally without thinking about SEO maintain stable organic traffic. The issue: these blogs often discuss low-competitive topics where the intrinsic quality of content is sufficient.
What nuances should we consider regarding this guideline?
Google says "avoid stuffing," but never specifies what constitutes a normal frequency. A primary keyword can legitimately appear 5, 8, or 12 times on a 1500-word page depending on the subject. The real criterion is the perceived fluidity by a human reader.
Another nuance: some technical fields require the repetition of specific terms. If you’re writing about "IT service contracts," you will naturally use that term several times. The trick is to alternate with reformulations ("IT service agreement," "IT contract," etc.) to break the monotony.
[To be verified] Google claims that frequency no longer matters, but my A/B tests show that a minimal presence of the exact keyword remains necessary for competitive queries. Zero occurrences = risk of not being understood by the algorithm on ambiguous terms.
When does this rule not apply strictly?
On transactional pages (product listings, landing pages), a certain structured repetition is inevitable: product title, description, technical characteristics, customer reviews. Google seems to tolerate a higher density if the context justifies this recurrence.
Ultra-long pages (5000-word guides) can also afford more occurrences without appearing spammy, provided the content is genuinely comprehensive and varied. Again, no absolute rule: it all depends on the ratio between repetition and added value.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do to avoid over-optimization?
Start by reading your text aloud. If some sentences sound odd or forced, you likely inserted a keyword artificially. Replace it with a synonym or completely rephrase.
Use a semantic analysis tool (1.fr, Semji, YourTextGuru) to check that your lexical field is rich and coherent. Google values pages that cover a complete semantic universe rather than those that simply repeat the same term. Also, consider asking ChatGPT or Claude for natural variations of a target query.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never place an exact keyword in every paragraph title (H2, H3). This is the number one signal of over-optimization. Vary phrases, ask questions, and use informative titles rather than robotic repeats.
Avoid overly optimized internal link anchors: repeating "SEO agency Paris" 10 times in your linking strategy is a dead giveaway. Alternate with brand anchors, generic anchors ("learn more"), and contextual anchors. Google closely monitors the internal anchor profile as much as the external one.
How can I check if my content passes the naturalness test?
Have someone outside SEO read your pages: a colleague, a test client, your grandmother. If this person finds the text fluid and informative without noticing repetitions, you’re probably in good shape.
Use Google Search Console to monitor your click-through rate and average position. A sudden drop after an update can signal a perceived quality issue. Also, compare your bounce rate and time on page with industry benchmarks.
- Read each page aloud to detect forced phrases
- Check that the semantic field is rich (at least 20-30 terms related to the topic)
- Limit exact internal link anchors to a maximum of 20% of the total
- Alternate primary keyword and variations in H2/H3 titles
- Have a non-SEO reader validate the text's fluidity
- Monitor behavioral metrics (bounce rate, duration) in Analytics
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle est la densité de mots-clés idéale selon Google ?
Peut-on encore utiliser un mot-clé exact dans le titre H1 ?
Les synonymes et variations comptent-ils autant que le mot-clé exact ?
Comment savoir si mon contenu est pénalisé pour sur-optimisation ?
Faut-il réécrire tous ses anciens contenus pour les rendre plus naturels ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 05/05/2015
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