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Official statement

There is no different weighting for links located above or below the fold. All links accessible for crawling by Googlebot will be taken into account in the same way.
57:00
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 23/10/2017 ✂ 9 statements
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Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that there is no different weighting between links above and below the fold. All links accessible to Googlebot count equally in the algorithm. In practice, the vertical position of a link on a page does not directly affect its authority or PageRank transmission, contrary to some persistent misconceptions.

What you need to understand

What exactly does 'the fold' mean in this context?

The fold (or 'above the fold' in English) refers to the visible part of a web page without scrolling. Everything that appears immediately upon loading is above the fold. The rest, which requires scrolling to access, is below it.

This concept historically comes from print media, where newspapers folded in stands only showed their upper half. On the web, the fold varies depending on screen size, resolution, and browser. A link visible on a 27-inch screen may require scrolling on mobile.

Why did this belief persist among SEOs?

For years, practitioners believed that Google valued links placed at the top of the page more. The logic seemed simple: content visible immediately is judged more important by the user, so Google should prioritize it.

This hypothesis relied on vague empirical observations and some older statements about the importance of main content. Some tests showed correlations between high position and better rankings, but without demonstrated causality. The positioning in the DOM or semantic proximity often better explained these results.

How does Googlebot really process links within a page?

The bot crawls the page by analyzing its HTML source code, not its final visual rendering. It does not 'see' the fold like a user. For Googlebot, a link in the footer technically has the same accessibility as a link in the header.

Google's statement clarifies that all crawlable links are taken into account similarly. Accessibility here means: present in crawlable HTML, not blocked by robots.txt, not hidden by complex JavaScript that Googlebot would fail to render.

  • Vertical position: no differentiated weighting based on the location above or below the fold
  • Technical accessibility: the determining factor remains Googlebot's ability to discover and follow the link
  • Semantic context: the relevance of the link depends on its anchor, its textual environment, not its pixel height on the page
  • Visual rendering vs. source code: Google analyzes the HTML, not just what the user sees without scrolling
  • Theoretical equity: footer and main navigation transmit PageRank equivalently if the links are technically identical

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement truly reflect real-world observations?

On paper, Google's assertion seems logical. In practice, several indirect factors create differences in treatment that complicate the picture. A footer link often appears on every page of the site, massively diluting link juice. An editorial link in main content benefits from a rich semantic context.

Google can technically treat all links equally in its base algorithm, but contextual signals play a critical role. Position in the DOM, proximity to main content, user click patterns—all of these indirectly influence the perceived value of a link. [To be verified]: impossible to know if external algorithms (RankBrain, Quality systems) adjust this theoretical equity.

What nuances must be kept in mind?

The statement focuses on direct weighting related to vertical position. It says nothing about other criteria that create real hierarchies between links. A link buried in a widget-filled sidebar will never have the same impact as a contextual editorial link, even if they are technically equivalent.

Google's algorithm combines hundreds of signals. Claiming that no weighting exists on an isolated criterion does not guarantee final equivalency. User engagement patterns differ radically between a link visible immediately and one requiring three scrolls. These behavioral signals indirectly influence ranking.

When might this rule not fully apply?

Some types of links may possibly escape this theoretical equity. Complex lazy loading links, which load after user interaction, may cause issues if Googlebot fails to render them. Links hidden in CSS but present in the HTML risk being devalued or ignored as manipulation.

Sites with heavy JavaScript present a borderline case. If content below the fold loads only after scrolling via JS events, Googlebot may miss some links despite its rendering capabilities. Google's theory applies perfectly to standard HTML pages, but less so to poorly configured SPAs.

Attention: This statement only concerns vertical positioning. It does not cover position in the DOM, semantic context, or user signals, which remain major differentiating factors between links.

Practical impact and recommendations

Should I reconsider the structure of my internal links?

No, not solely because of this statement. If you had concentrated all your strategic links at the top of the page for fear of a penalty for those below, that concern was unfounded. You can place important links lower in the content without losing their intrinsic SEO effectiveness.

However, do not swing to the opposite extreme. The position of a link influences user experience, thus indirectly affecting the engagement metrics that Google observes. A relevant link should remain logically accessible, even if it is located in the middle or end of the content.

What common mistakes does this clarification help avoid?

First mistake: overloading the header and main navigation to the detriment of ergonomics, solely to keep all priority links above the fold. This practice harms UX without proven SEO benefits. Overly dense menus dilute attention and slow conversions.

Second mistake: neglecting internal linking in the body of the article on the grounds that it is 'too low.' Contextual links in the middle of content have a higher semantic value than generic navigation links. Their vertical position matters little if the context is rich.

How can one concretely optimize internal linking without making mistakes?

Prioritize contextual relevance over pixel height. A link to a related page, inserted naturally in a paragraph detailing a related concept, always outperforms a generic link in a sidebar. The anchor should be descriptive, the textual environment coherent.

Ensure all your critical links are accessible in the initial HTML, without relying on late JavaScript. Test your site with a crawler (Screaming Frog, OnCrawl) to identify links invisible to Googlebot. Vertical position does not count, but technical accessibility remains crucial.

  • Audit your internal linking with a crawler to verify the real accessibility of all links
  • Place your strategic links in rich semantic contexts, irrespective of their height on the page
  • Avoid artificially concentrating all important links in the header or above the fold
  • Test the rendering of your pages with the URL Inspection Tool in the Search Console to confirm that Googlebot sees your links
  • Prioritize editorial links in main content over systematic links in sidebar or footer
  • Reduce the number of links on pages where they appear massively (site-wide footers) to limit dilution
The vertical position of a link does not directly affect its SEO weight, but its context, relevance, and technical accessibility remain crucial. Optimize for the user and for the crawler, not for an imaginary line halfway down the screen. These internal linking optimizations, particularly contextual analysis and strategic PageRank distribution, require sharp expertise and specialized tools. If your architecture becomes complex or you lack internal resources, enlisting an experienced SEO agency can help you structure an effective linking strategy without costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un lien en footer de site a-t-il la même valeur qu'un lien dans le contenu principal ?
Techniquement oui selon Google, mais le contexte sémantique diffère radicalement. Un lien footer apparaît sur toutes les pages (dilution massive), tandis qu'un lien éditorial bénéficie d'une pertinence contextuelle forte. La position verticale ne crée pas de différence, les autres facteurs oui.
Faut-il éviter de placer des liens importants en bas de mes articles longs ?
Non. Si ces liens sont pertinents et contextuels, leur position basse n'affecte pas leur poids SEO direct. L'ancre, le contexte sémantique et l'accessibilité technique comptent davantage que la hauteur pixel dans la page.
Google pénalise-t-il les sites avec beaucoup de liens en dessous de la ligne de flottaison ?
Aucune pénalité liée à la position verticale. Google peut dévaluer un site pour liens excessifs, manipulation ou mauvaise UX, mais pas spécifiquement parce que ces liens apparaissent après un scroll.
Les liens en lazy loading sont-ils pris en compte de la même manière ?
Cela dépend de l'implémentation. Si Googlebot réussit à rendre le JavaScript et découvrir les liens, ils comptent. Si le lazy loading bloque l'exploration, ces liens peuvent être ignorés, indépendamment de leur position verticale théorique.
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle aussi aux backlinks externes pointant vers mon site ?
Google parle ici des liens internes dans une page donnée. Pour les backlinks, la position du lien dans la page source (celle qui pointe vers vous) suit probablement la même logique : pas de pondération liée à la hauteur, mais contexte et pertinence restent cruciaux.
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Links & Backlinks

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