Official statement
Other statements from this video 1 ▾
Google states that once a manual action is lifted following a review, the algorithms retain no memory of the initial issue. The site starts anew, without any residual penalties. Essentially, this means that a complete cleanup followed by a well-documented reconsideration request should fully restore the site’s ranking potential.
What you need to understand
What exactly happens after a manual action is lifted?
When a site receives a manual action, it undergoes a penalty imposed by a Google employee, not just by algorithms. This action may involve low-quality content, artificial links, spam, or other guideline violations.
Once the issue is corrected, the owner can submit a reconsideration request via the Search Console. If the spam team validates that the corrections are effective, the manual action disappears. Google asserts that this lifting is definitive: algorithms do not retain any record of the initial issue.
Does this statement mean the site immediately regains its positions?
No. Lifting a manual action does not guarantee an instant return to rankings. Google removes the manual penalty, but the site must then be crawled again, re-indexed, and re-evaluated by the standard algorithms.
If the cleanup was superficial or if the site shows other low-quality signals, the positions might remain low. The lifting removes the manual handicap but does not create a bonus. The site then competes on a neutral ground with its competitors.
What is the difference between a manual action and an algorithmic penalty?
A manual action is recorded in the Search Console with an explicit message. It results from a human review and can be contested via reconsideration. An algorithmic penalty, on the other hand, is never officially confirmed by Google.
Algorithmic filters like Penguin or core updates automatically penalize certain signals without human intervention. They generate no notifications and cannot be subject to a formal reconsideration. Recovery from an algorithmic filter solely depends on the corrections made and the next algorithm recalculation.
- Lifted manual action: no residual memory in the algorithms according to Google
- Recovery time: variable depending on crawl, indexing, and residual quality signals
- Algorithmic penalty: no reconsideration possible, correction then waiting for the next refresh
- Transparency: manual actions notified, algorithmic filters never officially confirmed
- Duration of impact: a manual action can be lifted in a few days if corrected quickly, an algorithmic filter may persist for months
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Overall, yes. Sites that have undergone and then had a manual action lifted often report a complete recovery of their organic traffic after a few weeks. Unlike algorithmic filters, there is no visible lasting stigma in crawl logs or ranking patterns.
However, [To be verified]: the speed of recovery varies greatly depending on the type of manual action. A massive spam fix may take several months to regain Google's trust, even if the action is technically lifted. The question remains whether this slowness stems from a residual algorithmic mistrust or simply from a lack of positive signals to reclaim positions.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Google states that algorithms do not retain the issue long-term. This phrasing leaves doubt: what about the short and medium term? Can a site experience an implicit probation period after lifting, even without an official notification?
Empirical data suggests that a site that has had multiple consecutive manual actions takes longer to recover than a site affected only once. If algorithms have no memory, why this difference? One hypothesis: trust signals (authority, engagement, natural backlinks) degrade during the penalty period, and their reconstruction takes time, irrespective of the lifting.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
If the cleanup is incomplete, the team may lift the manual action while leaving residual negative signals that the algorithms detect. For example: removal of notified toxic backlinks but retention of a more discreet PBN network. Technically, the action is lifted, but the site remains vulnerable to Penguin filters or future core updates.
Another case: sites that have employed widespread spam (content farms, massive cloaking) may see their domain permanently weakened even after corrections. Google claims not to retain algorithmic memory, but a history of manipulation may have degraded the domain's authority to the point where recovery remains difficult. It's less a hidden penalty than a structural loss of trust.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely after receiving a manual action?
First step: precisely identify the type of manual action in the Search Console. Google often provides examples of URLs or incriminating patterns. Do not just fix these examples: analyze the entire site for similar practices.
Second step: document the corrections in the reconsideration request. Google appreciates factual evidence: screenshots of deleted links, exports from the Search Console showing the decrease of toxic backlinks, examples of rewritten or deleted content. A vague request like “we have corrected the issue” delays lifting.
What mistakes to avoid when submitting a reconsideration request?
Never submit a reconsideration without having completed a full cleanup. Google teams easily detect cosmetic fixes. If your first reconsideration is rejected, each subsequent attempt undergoes a stricter scrutiny. It is better to take an extra week to clean everything than to rush a shaky request.
Avoid blaming third parties in your request. Whether the spam came from a dishonest agency or a competitor, Google does not care: you are responsible for your site. Focus on corrective actions, not on excuses. And do not promise to “not do it again”: show that you have already corrected it, period.
How to verify that my site is indeed in the clear after lifting?
Monitor Google's crawling in the weeks following the lifting. An increase in pages crawled per day is a good sign: Google actively reevaluates your site. Also, check that previously de-indexed pages reappear in the index via targeted site: queries.
Analyze traffic trends by segment: if certain categories of pages do not recover, they may have quality issues independent of the manual action. A post-lifting audit can help identify these weaknesses before they trigger a new algorithmic filter.
- Identify the exact type of manual action and the URLs/examples provided by Google
- Correct the entire site, not just the notified examples
- Document each correction with factual evidence in the reconsideration request
- Monitor crawling and indexing in the 2-4 weeks following the lifting
- Analyze traffic segments to identify any residual issues
- Set up monitoring of backlinks to avoid any recurrence
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google traite une demande de réexamen ?
Une action manuelle levée peut-elle être réappliquée ensuite ?
Dois-je utiliser l'outil de désaveu de liens en parallèle de la correction ?
Un site ayant eu une action manuelle peut-il atteindre les mêmes positions qu'avant ?
Les actions manuelles affectent-elles tout le site ou seulement certaines pages ?
🎥 From the same video 1
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 21/12/2017
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.