Official statement
Other statements from this video 39 ▾
- □ Redirection 301 ou canonical pour fusionner deux sites : quelle différence pour le SEO ?
- □ Comment apparaître dans les Top Stories sans être un site d'actualités ?
- □ Comment Google détermine-t-il réellement la date de publication d'un article ?
- □ Les pages orphelines sont-elles vraiment invisibles pour Google ?
- □ Les Core Web Vitals vont-ils vraiment bouleverser votre classement SEO ?
- □ Pourquoi vos tests locaux de performance ne correspondent-ils jamais aux données Search Console ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment utiliser rel="sponsored" plutôt que nofollow pour ses liens affiliés ?
- □ Un même site peut-il monopoliser toute la première page de Google ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment optimiser vos pages pour les mots 'best' et 'top' ?
- □ Pourquoi Google met-il 3 à 6 mois pour crawler votre refonte complète ?
- □ La longueur d'article influence-t-elle vraiment le classement Google ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment matcher les mots-clés mot pour mot dans vos contenus SEO ?
- □ L'indexation Google est-elle vraiment instantanée ou existe-t-il des délais cachés ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment choisir entre redirection 301 et canonical pour fusionner deux sites ?
- □ Top Stories et News utilisent-ils vraiment des algorithmes différents de la recherche classique ?
- □ Pourquoi l'onglet Google News n'affiche-t-il pas forcément vos articles par ordre chronologique ?
- □ Les pages orphelines peuvent-elles vraiment nuire au référencement de votre site ?
- □ Les Core Web Vitals vont-ils vraiment bouleverser le classement dans les SERP ?
- □ Rel=nofollow ou rel=sponsored pour les liens d'affiliation : y a-t-il vraiment une différence ?
- □ Google limite-t-il vraiment le nombre de fois qu'un domaine peut apparaître dans les résultats ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment arrêter d'utiliser des mots-clés en correspondance exacte dans vos contenus ?
- □ Pourquoi la spécificité du contenu prime-t-elle sur le bourrage de mots-clés ?
- □ La longueur d'un article influence-t-elle vraiment son classement dans Google ?
- □ Pourquoi Google met-il 3 à 6 mois à rafraîchir l'intégralité d'un gros site ?
- □ Faut-il arrêter de soumettre manuellement des URL à Google ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment intégrer « best » et « top » dans vos contenus pour ranker sur ces requêtes ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment choisir entre redirection 301 et canonical pour fusionner deux sites ?
- □ Top Stories et onglet News : votre site peut-il vraiment y apparaître sans être un média d'actualité ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment aligner les dates visibles et les données structurées pour le classement chronologique ?
- □ Les pages orphelines pénalisent-elles vraiment votre référencement ?
- □ Les Core Web Vitals sont-ils vraiment devenus un facteur de classement déterminant ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment marquer ses liens d'affiliation pour éviter une pénalité Google ?
- □ Un même site peut-il vraiment apparaître 7 fois sur la même SERP ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment optimiser vos pages pour 'best', 'top' ou 'near me' ?
- □ Pourquoi Google met-il 3 à 6 mois à rafraîchir les grands sites ?
- □ La longueur d'un article influence-t-elle vraiment son classement Google ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment matcher les mots-clés exacts dans vos contenus SEO ?
- □ Google applique-t-il vraiment un délai d'indexation basé sur la qualité de vos pages ?
- □ Pourquoi Google affiche-t-il encore l'ancien domaine dans les requêtes site: après une redirection 301 ?
Google accepts both rel=nofollow and rel=sponsored for marking affiliate links with no major SEO difference between the two attributes. The company expresses a preference for sponsored as it better qualifies the commercial nature of the link, but both can even be combined. For SEO, this means no urgent migration is necessary if your affiliations are already in nofollow — the key is to clearly signal monetized links.
What you need to understand
Why does Google request qualifying affiliate links?
For years, Google has mandated that any paid link — whether through affiliation, sponsorship, or advertising — must be marked. The goal is simple: to prevent PageRank from artificially flowing through commercial transactions, which would distort organic rankings.
The attributes rel=nofollow and rel=sponsored serve to indicate to the engine that a link does not constitute a natural editorial vote. Without this designation, a site risks a manual penalty for "participation in a link scheme," especially if the volume of undeclared affiliations is substantial.
What are the technical differences between nofollow and sponsored?
From a crawling and PageRank attribution perspective, both attributes have the exact same effect: Google does not pass algorithmic credit through these links. The distinction lies solely in semantics — sponsored explicitly qualifies a commercial relationship, while nofollow remains generic.
A link can carry both attributes simultaneously (rel="nofollow sponsored"), which does not change algorithmic handling but reinforces clarity for third-party tools and compliance audits. Google treats this combination just like it treats each individual attribute in isolation.
Is this flexibility permanent or temporary?
Mueller's statement does not set a deadline nor announce an obligatory migration to rel=sponsored. Google maintains an assumed tolerance: as long as the link carries at least nofollow, compliance is achieved.
That said, since the algorithm is constantly evolving, there is no guarantee that one day Google will not refine its treatment to more finely distinguish explicit affiliations (sponsored) from other nofollow links. At this stage, nothing indicates such intent — but a savvy professional anticipates rather than suffers.
- Google accepts nofollow and sponsored without major SEO distinction
- Both attributes block PageRank transfer identically
- The combination rel="nofollow sponsored" is valid and handled like each attribute separately
- No mandatory migration is required for sites already using nofollow
- Google prefers sponsored for its semantic clarity, but does not make it a ranking criterion
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
In reality, thousands of affiliate sites continue to exclusively use rel=nofollow without suffering any penalties. Google's manual audits mainly target unqualified links — not the distinction between nofollow and sponsored.
It is even observed that some players combine both attributes as a legal precaution or to facilitate automatic detection by compliance tools. Google handles this redundancy without flinching, confirming that semantics do not impact ranking.
What nuances should be added to this apparent flexibility?
Google states that there is "no major SEO difference" — a formulation that leaves the door open for minor, undocumented distinctions. [To be verified]: there is no proof that Google does not use these attributes as secondary signals to classify sites (pure affiliation vs. editorial + monetization).
Furthermore, using nofollow exclusively on all your outgoing links can signal an artificially sculpted link profile, especially if you also block your legitimate editorial links. A natural mix remains preferable — and this is where sponsored finds its purpose: it clearly differentiates commercial links from organic nofollow links (comments, UGC, etc.).
In what cases does this rule not apply or become risky?
If you operate a monetized satellite site network with cross-affiliate links, Google may view the entire network as a link scheme even with the correct attributes. The attribute alone is not sufficient: the editorial context matters.
Similarly, hiding affiliate links behind 302 redirects or JavaScript scripts to circumvent the obligation to qualify them remains a violation — the attribute must appear on the original HTML link, not on the final destination after redirection.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely on an existing site?
If your affiliate links already use rel=nofollow, no urgent action is required. You are compliant. If you are revamping your site or changing your tech stack, prioritize sponsored for clarity — but do not launch a massive migration just for that.
For new content, adopt rel=sponsored by default on all monetized links (affiliation, native advertising, paid partnerships). This simplifies compliance audits and anticipates potential future algorithmic changes.
What mistakes should be avoided during implementation?
Don't just add the attribute in your CMS — check the final HTML rendering. Some affiliate plugins or cloaking systems rewrite links server-side and remove attributes. A test with the browser inspector on a published page confirms the actual presence of the rel.
Avoid mixing strategies: if you use sponsored on some links of an affiliate program and nofollow on others from the same program, Google may view it as an attempt at manipulation. Be consistent across the site.
How to verify that my site is compliant and anticipate risks?
Run a complete crawl with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl filtering for URLs containing your affiliate tracking IDs (ex: ?ref=, ?aff=, /go/). Export the list and verify that each link properly carries nofollow or sponsored.
For sites with a high volume of user-generated or partner content, automate the addition of the attribute via regex or hooks at the CMS level. A manual audit every quarter remains essential to detect deviations — an unqualified affiliate link generating SEO traffic can trigger a manual Google review.
- Audit all outgoing links with tracking IDs (crawl + regex)
- Prioritize rel=sponsored for new monetized links
- Check the rendered HTML client-side, not just the CMS source code
- Standardize the attribute within each affiliate program
- Automate the addition via CMS hooks for large-scale content
- Document the editorial policy to properly brief authors
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je utiliser rel=nofollow et rel=sponsored ensemble sur le même lien ?
Dois-je migrer mes liens d'affiliation de nofollow vers sponsored ?
Est-ce que rel=sponsored améliore mon SEO par rapport à nofollow ?
Que se passe-t-il si j'oublie de qualifier un lien d'affiliation ?
Les attributs nofollow/sponsored doivent-ils figurer sur le lien initial ou peuvent-ils être ajoutés après redirection ?
🎥 From the same video 39
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 13/11/2020
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