Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 3:11 Comment tester l'impact SEO d'une modification de balises title sans se tromper ?
- 18:54 Bloquer Googlebot tue-t-il vraiment votre classement immédiatement ?
- 20:29 Faut-il vraiment utiliser la balise canonical entre sous-domaines pour des pages similaires ?
- 24:34 Faut-il vraiment éviter robots.txt pour gérer les facettes et filtres des sites e-commerce ?
- 27:56 Le HTTPS est-il vraiment un facteur de classement déterminant pour le SEO ?
- 46:37 Le mobile-first indexing booste-t-il vraiment votre positionnement Google ?
- 50:29 L'ordre des URLs et la priorité dans les sitemaps XML ont-ils un impact sur le crawl Google ?
- 56:45 Les directives qualité de Google peuvent-elles vraiment guider l'algorithme sans métriques techniques précises ?
- 89:00 La performance mobile est-elle vraiment un signal de classement direct ou juste un facteur d'expérience ?
Google explicitly limits the use of the disavow file to sites that have received a manual action for artificial links. For a 'normal' backlink profile, the tool becomes unnecessary: algorithms can now ignore toxic links without intervention. This statement invites a reconsideration of systematic backlink audits and a shift in focus towards proactive acquisition rather than defensive cleanup.
What you need to understand
Why does Google restrict the use of disavow so much?
The disavow file has long represented the SEO nightmare: cleaning a link profile polluted by over-optimized anchors, shady directories, or poorly constructed PBNs. Google makes it clear here that this tool remains relevant only in the case of a manually notified action in Search Console.
In concrete terms? If you haven't received an explicit warning for 'artificial links to your site', tampering with disavow is pointless. Current algorithms — particularly Penguin, integrated into the core since 2016 — can devalue or ignore low-quality backlinks without you lifting a finger.
What constitutes a 'normal mix of links' according to Google?
This vague wording deserves clarification. A 'normal' profile tolerates links of varying quality: local directories, unsolicited mentions, backlinks from mediocre third-party content. As long as there's no clear pattern of manipulation (80% commercial anchors, recycled expired domains, massive spam), Google believes its algorithm can sort them out.
The nuance? 'Capable of ignoring' does not mean 'always perfectly ignores.' Field observations show that some sites with a high ratio of toxic links experience fluctuations — but without a formal manual action, disavow generally does not resolve anything.
In what cases is the tool essential?
Manual action received for 'Unnatural links pointing to your site' or 'Unnatural outbound links'. Period. You must then identify the problematic backlinks, attempt to have them removed at the source (via webmaster contact), and then disavow what remains before submitting a reconsideration request.
Outside this scenario, Mueller is clear: no preventive panic. A competitor bombarding you with spam links? Google detects and ignores that. An Ahrefs audit reporting 200 'toxic' domains? As long as no manual action arises, it’s just noise.
- Disavow is a curative tool, not preventive — it responds to a penalty, not a theoretical audit.
- Google now handles the majority of toxic links internally, without your manual intervention.
- A '100% clean' backlink profile does not exist — and Google does not expect one.
- In the absence of manual action, the time spent on a disavow cleanup would be better invested in content creation or proactive link building.
- The tool remains crucial only during the reconsideration phase following a confirmed penalty.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes and no. On one hand, it’s indeed observed that sites victims of massive negative SEO (spam link bombardment) generally do not suffer any visible penalties — which supports Mueller's statement. The algorithms seem robust against blatant attacks.
On the other hand, some edge cases raise questions. Sites with a history of aggressive old link building (pre-Penguin) sometimes show unexplained stagnations without formal manual action. Disavowing these old links rarely brings measurable gains — but the lack of gains does not prove they do not weigh negatively. [To be verified] on large cohorts with before/after data.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller speaks of 'the majority' of low-quality links — not all. This wording leaves a margin of uncertainty. Which links escape the automatic filter? Google never specifies, maintaining a frustrating information asymmetry.
Another blind spot: sites that massively purchased links in the past but were never caught. Should you disavow these backlinks preventively before an algorithm update detects them? The official position says no — but some practitioners maintain this assurance, lacking an absolute guarantee.
In what scenarios is the use of disavow still defensible outside manual action?
Case 1: You have bought a domain with a dubious history (former PBN, blatant spam). Even without active manual action, cleaning the toxic legacy can accelerate the domain's rehabilitation. It’s a gamble — not a certainty.
Case 2: You are preparing a site for a sale or investor audit. A clean backlink profile reassures the buyer, even if Google technically doesn't care. This is about risk management, not pure SEO.
Case 3: You operate in a highly regulated sector (health, finance) where a link from a dubious site can pose a reputational issue beyond SEO. Again, this is a business decision, not an algorithmic one.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely if you have no manual action?
Stop obsessive backlink audits. If your Search Console is free of warnings, you have no reason to spend hours analyzing every backlink with Ahrefs, Majestic, or Semrush. These tools flag 'toxic' links according to their own metrics — not Google's.
Redirect this time to proactive acquisition: guest posts on industry media, digital press relations, link baiting through data studies. A good obtained link is worth more than ten bad disavowed links.
How to react if you receive a manual action for artificial links?
Here, disavow becomes central again. Download the complete export of your backlinks from Search Console. Sort by referring domain, not by URL (one spam domain can generate thousands of pages). Identify suspicious patterns: repetitive commercial anchors, foreign-language domains irrelevant to your site, mass footer links.
Contact the webmasters of the problematic sites to request removal — keep track of these emails, Google asks for them during reconsideration. For what remains after 2-3 weeks, compile a clean disavow file (syntax domain:example.com to exclude an entire domain). Submit via Search Console, then initiate the reconsideration request documenting your efforts.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided with the disavow file?
Never disavow lightly. Each line in this file potentially removes PageRank. Disavowing a link from a legitimate media source because Ahrefs rates it 'DR 30' is a net loss. Always prioritize removal at the source when possible — disavow is merely a last resort.
Also, avoid disavowing your own satellite domains or poorly configured internal links. It may seem obvious, but manipulation errors happen — and Google can take weeks to reprocess the file.
- Check Search Console every quarter for any potential manual actions
- Only initiate a thorough backlink audit if you notice an unexplained drop AND a Google notification
- Document every attempt to remove links before disavowing (screenshots, emails sent)
- Test your disavow file syntax with a validator before upload
- Prefer
domain:over individual URLs for massive spam domains - Keep a backup of your disavow file before each modification — you can't easily 'undo'
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je disavower les liens spam envoyés par un concurrent ?
Un site peut-il être pénalisé sans recevoir de notification d'action manuelle ?
Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour traiter un fichier disavow ?
Peut-on annuler un disavow si on a fait une erreur ?
Les outils tiers (Ahrefs, Semrush) sont-ils fiables pour identifier les liens toxiques ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 23/01/2019
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