Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 2:37 Is interlinking multiple web projects risky for SEO?
- 3:41 Does the hreflang attribute really influence the ranking of your international pages?
- 6:00 Does geotargeting really affect your site's local ranking?
- 10:21 Have links really lost their importance for ranking?
- 13:12 Do social signals really influence Google rankings?
- 13:26 Does Mobile First Indexing really work without mobile optimization?
- 13:44 Why isn't your site regaining its ranking after a manual penalty has been lifted?
- 14:34 How does Google really choose the canonical version of a page when faced with duplicate content?
- 16:15 Does Google Cache really reveal the mobile-desktop differences that affect your ranking?
- 17:42 Does mobile-first indexing mean that Google punishes sites that are not optimized for mobile?
- 19:34 Should you really implement hreflang on all multilingual sites?
- 23:41 Does the canonical tag really override all your product variations?
- 25:10 Can Google really exclude your pages from results because of soft 404s?
- 25:20 Can soft 404 pages for out-of-stock products really hurt your rankings?
- 27:12 Do social signals really affect organic search rankings?
- 29:38 Do links to a canonicalized page lose their SEO value?
- 31:44 Are canonical tags and headers rendered in JavaScript truly ignored by Google?
- 50:01 Can you block MP4 video files in robots.txt without risking SEO penalties?
- 60:20 Should you really optimize the length of your meta descriptions?
- 70:24 Why does Search Console show some resources as blocked when they're supposed to be accessible?
- 73:40 Does Google really index raw JSON responses?
- 75:16 Does the initial static HTML of a SPA determine its indexing?
Google dynamically adjusts the length of displayed snippets based on device and query. In practice, counting characters is unnecessary; focus on a relevant summary that captures the essence of the page. Keep in mind that Google can also completely ignore your description if it deems it less relevant than a snippet generated from the content.
What you need to understand
What does this variability in length really mean?
Google no longer operates with a fixed character standard for meta descriptions. In practice, a snippet might show 120 characters on mobile for a transactional query, then 300 characters on desktop for a complex informational query. This contextual variability serves a purpose: to present the most relevant information based on search intent and the available space.
Mueller emphasizes substance over form. The goal is not to stuff 155 characters with keywords, but to clearly summarize what the user will find on the page. If your description is too short, Google might generate a snippet from the visible content. If it is too long, it will be truncated unpredictably.
Why does Google sometimes generate its own snippets?
Google frequently ignores manually written meta descriptions. Field studies show that 70% of displayed snippets do not match the original meta description tag. Why? Because the algorithm believes it can better address the query by drawing from the page content.
This automatic rewriting mainly occurs when the description is generic, filled with commercial jargon, or does not match the terms of the query. Google then prioritizes a passage from the content that contains the searched keywords. It’s a matter of contextual relevance, not blind adherence to meta guidelines.
How does Google choose the content to extract?
The algorithm scans visible text, lists, tables, and sometimes even the alternative text of images. It looks for semantic matches between the query and content elements. A well-written introductory paragraph is more likely to be extracted than a bland meta description.
Featured snippets and rich results add a layer of complexity. Google can create a hybrid snippet: meta description + content fragment + structured data. This mosaic of information aims to maximize the click-through rate while informing the user accurately.
- Snippet length varies based on device (mobile vs desktop) and query
- Google ignores 70% of meta descriptions in favor of dynamically generated snippets
- Optimizing for relevance and clarity consistently outweighs optimization for a fixed character count
- The visible content of the page directly influences the displayed snippets, even without a meta description
- Featured snippets and rich results can replace or complement your description
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices?
Yes, but it simplifies a harsher reality. In practice, it is seen that Google will rewrite your description regardless if it does not match sufficiently with the query. Mueller says, “write to capture the essence of the page”: in reality, write primarily to ensure your main content is scannable and structured, because that’s where Google will look.
Tests show that descriptions of 120-155 characters remain statistically less truncated on mobile, but there is no guarantee they will be displayed. A site can have 300 URLs with perfect descriptions and see 80% of them replaced. It’s frustrating, but it’s the algorithmic reality.
What nuances should we add to this advice?
Mueller does not specify that the quality of visible content now takes precedence over the meta description. If your initial paragraphs are filled with corporate jargon, Google will generate a mediocre snippet. If your introduction is dense and relevant, the snippet will be strong even without a neat meta description.
Another blind spot is structured data. A well-implemented schema.org can generate rich snippets that completely overshadow your description. Mueller talks about “capturing essence,” but he omits that this essence can be better expressed via JSON-LD than through a standard meta tag. [To be verified]: Google has never publicly confirmed the respective weight between meta description, visible content, and structured data in snippet generation.
When does this rule not apply?
Transactional e-commerce pages are a special case. Google often displays price, availability, reviews directly in the snippet, completely ignoring the description. The same goes for event pages where dates and locations take precedence. Mueller’s recommendation mainly applies to standard editorial content.
Complex multilingual sites also see erratic behaviors. A description in French may be partially replaced by English content if Google believes the user is searching for an international technical term. This is rare, but it happens with B2B niche queries.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do with existing meta descriptions?
Stop counting characters religiously. Instead, audit your descriptions to ensure they truly summarize the content without jargon or empty marketing promises. A good description answers, “What will the user learn or gain here?” in a clear sentence.
Prioritize strategic pages: homepage, main landing pages, key product sheets. For the rest, if your content is well-structured with solid introductions, Google will manage even without a meta description. Focus your efforts where the click-through rate truly matters.
How can you check if Google is using your descriptions or generating its own?
Perform a search for site:yourdomain.com and compare the displayed snippets with your meta tags. Note the patterns: which pages retain their description? Which ones are rewritten? Often, pages with dense, structured content keep their description, while thin pages get rewritten.
Use Search Console to monitor CTR per page. If an important page has an abnormally low CTR, inspect the snippet displayed in the SERP. Sometimes, Google generates a confusing or incomplete snippet. In that case, revise both the meta description AND the first paragraphs of the content to guide the algorithm.
What mistakes should be avoided when writing descriptions?
Never duplicate descriptions across multiple pages. Google detects these duplicates and systematically ignores them. It is better to have no description than a duplicate description on 50 URLs.
Avoid purely promotional descriptions: “Best X on the market, exceptional quality, unbeatable prices”. Google skips those in favor of the factual content of the page. Focus on concrete benefits and verifiable information.
- Write 120-160 character descriptions to limit truncation, but accept that Google may rewrite them
- Pay attention to the first three paragraphs of each page: they serve as a source for snippets
- Eliminate duplicate descriptions through a complete technical crawl
- Test different formulations and measure the CTR impact in Search Console
- Implement relevant schema.org to enrich the snippets automatically
- Monitor queries where your snippets are truncated or poorly generated and adjust the visible content
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google respecte-t-il toujours la meta description que j'ai rédigée ?
Quelle longueur de meta description maximise mes chances d'affichage complet ?
Dois-je rédiger une meta description pour chaque page de mon site ?
Que se passe-t-il si je laisse la meta description vide ?
Les mots-clés dans la meta description influencent-ils le ranking ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 17/05/2018
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