What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 3 questions

Less than 30 seconds. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~30s 🎯 3 questions 📚 SEO Google

Official statement

The anchor text of a link is the main contextual element used by Google. The context of the page containing the link is secondary and less important than the anchor itself.
16:52
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:55 💬 EN 📅 25/09/2020 ✂ 21 statements
Watch on YouTube (16:52) →
Other statements from this video 20
  1. 1:34 Pourquoi vos nouveaux contenus perdent-ils brutalement leurs positions après un pic initial ?
  2. 1:34 Un featured snippet peut-il vraiment s'afficher sans être premier dans les résultats organiques ?
  3. 2:06 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour vos contenus pour conserver vos positions Google ?
  4. 4:12 L'indexation mobile-first ignore-t-elle vraiment la version desktop de votre site ?
  5. 5:46 Faut-il vraiment rediriger dans les deux sens entre desktop et mobile ?
  6. 8:52 Faut-il vraiment servir des images basse résolution pour les connexions lentes ?
  7. 10:02 Les images décoratives doivent-elles vraiment être optimisées pour le SEO ?
  8. 13:47 Le guest posting pour obtenir des backlinks est-il vraiment risqué ?
  9. 14:50 Le contenu syndiqué est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google comme duplicate content ?
  10. 15:51 Les URLs nues comme ancres tuent-elles vraiment le contexte SEO de vos liens ?
  11. 19:00 Un simple changement de layout peut-il vraiment impacter votre référencement ?
  12. 21:37 La compatibilité mobile impacte-t-elle vraiment le référencement desktop ?
  13. 23:14 Le trafic généré par vos backlinks influence-t-il vraiment votre positionnement Google ?
  14. 25:17 Faut-il vraiment abandonner AMP si votre site est déjà rapide ?
  15. 29:24 Google efface-t-il vraiment l'historique d'un domaine expiré lors d'une reprise ?
  16. 37:53 Est-ce que Search Console analyse vraiment toutes les pages de votre site ?
  17. 43:06 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment pour récupérer après un hack SEO ?
  18. 46:46 Faut-il vraiment indexer toutes les pages paginées pour éviter la perte de produits ?
  19. 48:55 Faut-il vraiment privilégier noindex plutôt que canonical sur les facettes e-commerce ?
  20. 51:02 Le rendu côté serveur est-il vraiment exempt de tout risque de pénalité pour cloaking ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that the anchor text of a link takes precedence over the context of the page hosting it. In practical terms, the anchor conveys more semantic weight and relevance signals than the surrounding content. For SEOs, this reinforces the strategic importance of negotiating anchors in link building and minimizes the impact of poorly themed intermediary pages.

What you need to understand

Why does Google prioritize anchor text over context?

The search engine treats anchor text as an explicit vote of confidence on the subject of the target page. Unlike surrounding content that can be generic or decontextualized, the anchor serves as an intentional and focused signal.

Historically, Google has built on this logic: the original PageRank already relied on anchor analysis to qualify thematic relevance. What Mueller clarifies here is the explicit hierarchy between these two signals when present simultaneously.

Does the context of the page still hold any value?

It plays a secondary but not negligible role. Google uses it to disambiguate vague anchors (“click here”, “learn more”) or to validate the overall thematic coherence of the link.

In cases where the anchor is optimized and explicit, context becomes redundant — hence its demotion. This explains why links from poorly themed pages (general directories, blog footers) can still transmit value if the anchor is well-targeted.

What are the implications for link building strategy?

This statement validates what many practitioners observe in practice: a link with exact or partially optimized anchor outperforms a generic contextual link, even if the latter comes from a long and themed article.

However, this does not mean that context is negligible in all scenarios. Anti-spam algorithms likely use context to detect artificial placements or link farms. A perfect anchor in an incoherent environment triggers warning signals.

  • The anchor prevails in the calculation of thematic relevance and the passing of SEO juice
  • Context serves as a safety net to validate the naturalness of the link
  • Generic anchors (“here”, “site”) rely more on surrounding context
  • A link in a footer or sidebar transmits value if the anchor is optimized
  • Anti-spam algorithms monitor the anchor/context coherence to filter out abuses

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and it is one of the few statements from Google that explicitly confirms what A/B tests have revealed for years. Link building campaigns show that targeted anchors yield measurable ranking gains, even on donor sites with low thematic authority.

However, Mueller's wording remains deliberately vague regarding the relative weight. “Secondary” does not mean “10% importance” or “50% importance”. It is impossible to quantify the delta — and this is probably intentional to avoid ultra-targeted manipulations.

In which cases does this rule not fully apply?

Generic or empty anchors force Google to rely more on context. A link “click here” in a paragraph about “solar panels” will likely transmit a renewable energy-oriented signal, even if the anchor itself is neutral.

Similarly, image links (where the alt text replaces the text anchor) likely combine anchor and context in a more balanced manner. [To be verified]: no public data precisely details how Google weighs alt-text versus the surrounding paragraph in this specific case.

What strategic nuances should be applied?

This hierarchy of anchor > context should not lead to completely neglect the link environment. An over-optimized anchor profile in off-topic contexts triggers manual or algorithmic penalties (Penguin legacy).

The real leverage is smart diversification: mixing exact anchors in relevant contexts, partial anchors in average contexts, and branded anchors in varied contexts. Mueller's statement does not change this fundamental caution — it merely specifies where Google looks first.

Warning: Over-optimizing anchors while completely neglecting context exposes you to manipulation signals. Balance remains key.

Practical impact and recommendations

How to concretely adjust your link building strategy?

Prioritize anchor negotiations when acquiring links. A guest post on a moderately themed blog with an optimized anchor is often worth more than a generic contextual link in an ultra-themed dossier but with a weak anchor.

Focus your efforts on the quality of the anchor itself: semantic variants, long-tail, partially optimized anchors that naturally integrate the target keyword without forcing syntax. Context remains a safeguard, not the main lever.

What mistakes to avoid when applying this rule?

Do not fall into the trap of systematic exact anchor use. Google knows that 100% optimized anchors = artificial footprint. Mueller's statement does not validate over-optimization; it prioritizes signals.

Avoid placing premium anchors in completely incoherent environments (link “lawyer Paris” in a cooking blog). Context serves as a spam filter: a too blatant gap cancels the benefit of the anchor.

How to check if your link profile is compliant?

Audit your backlinks via Ahrefs, Majestic, or SEMrush by extracting the anchor distribution. A healthy profile shows 40-60% branded/URL anchors, 20-30% generic anchors, 10-20% partially optimized anchors, and less than 10% exact anchors.

Cross-reference this analysis with the thematization of source pages. If your exact anchors mainly come from off-topic pages, you risk an algorithmic drop. The anchor prevails, but context validates legitimacy.

  • Prioritize optimized anchors in link negotiations
  • Maintain diversification in the anchor profile (brand, generic, partial, exact)
  • Ensure that exact anchors come from contexts at least partially coherent
  • Regularly audit anchor/context distribution via SEO tools
  • Avoid repetitive exact anchors from identical environments
  • Gradually test the anchor vs context impact on secondary pages before global deployment
The anchor is the priority lever, context is the safeguard. Optimize one without neglecting the other. This combined approach maximizes the transmission of SEO juice while minimizing the risk of penalties. For high-stakes sites or complex profiles to audit, support from a specialized SEO agency can be wise to finely tune this strategy without crossing algorithmic red lines.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une ancre optimisée compense-t-elle un contexte faible ou hors-sujet ?
Partiellement. L'ancre transmet le signal de pertinence principal, mais un contexte incohérent peut déclencher des filtres anti-spam. L'équilibre reste nécessaire.
Les ancres génériques mobilisent-elles davantage le contexte environnant ?
Oui. Quand l'ancre ne contient aucun signal sémantique ('cliquez ici', 'en savoir plus'), Google s'appuie davantage sur le texte autour du lien pour qualifier la cible.
Un lien en footer avec ancre optimisée vaut-il le coup ?
Oui, si le footer est présent sur des pages thématiquement cohérentes. L'ancre prime, mais un footer sitewide sur 10 000 pages hors-sujet reste risqué.
Comment Google gère-t-il les ancres contradictoires vers une même page ?
Il agrège probablement les signaux par ancre, en pondérant par autorité de la source. Les ancres majoritaires ou provenant de sources fortes dominent la compréhension thématique de la page.
Le contexte compte-t-il davantage pour les liens images ?
Probablement. L'attribut alt remplace l'ancre textuelle, mais si celui-ci est vague, le contexte gagne en importance pour qualifier le lien. Aucune donnée officielle ne quantifie ce ratio.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content AI & SEO Links & Backlinks

🎥 From the same video 20

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 25/09/2020

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.