Official statement
Other statements from this video 39 ▾
- □ Should you really clean up your artificial links if Google already ignores them?
- □ Are links really losing their ranking power on Google?
- □ Do backlinks lose their significance once a website is established?
- □ Should we really ban all exchanges of value for links?
- □ Are editorial collaborations with backlinks really risk-free according to Google?
- □ Should you really stop all large-scale repetitive link tactics?
- □ Are Google’s manual actions always visible in Search Console?
- □ Does an inactive spam domain automatically regain its reputation after a decade?
- □ Should AMP pages really adhere to the same Core Web Vitals thresholds as standard HTML pages?
- □ Should you really update the publication date after every small change on a page?
- □ Do News sitemaps really accelerate the indexing of your news articles?
- □ Can self-referential canonical tags really safeguard your site from URL duplications?
- □ Should you really let go of rel=next and rel=prev tags for pagination?
- □ Is it true that the number of words isn't a Google ranking factor?
- □ Can database-generated sites still rank by automatically cross-referencing data?
- □ Are long-term 302 redirects really equivalent to 301s for SEO?
- □ How long can a 503 error last without risking deindexation?
- □ Why does it really take 3 to 4 months for a revamp to be recognized by Google?
- □ Are separate mobile URLs (m.example.com) still a viable SEO option?
- □ Should you be worried about massively removing backlinks after a manual penalty?
- □ Are Backlinks Becoming a Secondary Ranking Factor?
- □ Should you really wait for links to come in 'naturally' or take the initiative?
- □ What exactly constitutes a natural link according to Google, and how can you avoid risky practices?
- □ Should you nofollow all editorial links that come from collaborations with experts?
- □ Are you truly confident that you don't have any Google manual penalties?
- □ Does a spammy past really erase its SEO footprint after a decade?
- □ Do AMP pages still hold a competitive edge against Core Web Vitals?
- □ Should you really update a page's publication date to improve its ranking?
- □ Do News sitemaps really speed up the indexing of your content?
- □ Why does your site fluctuate between page 1 and page 5 of Google's results?
- □ Does fact-check markup really enhance your page rankings?
- □ Is it true that you can ditch AMP to appear in Google Discover?
- □ Should you really add a self-referencing canonical tag on every page?
- □ Should we still use rel=next and rel=previous tags for pagination?
- □ Is it true that the number of words doesn’t really matter for Google rankings?
- □ Can database-generated sites really rank on Google?
- □ Should you really abandon separate mobile URLs (m.example.com)?
- □ Should you really worry about the difference between 301 and 302 redirects?
- □ How long can you keep a 503 code without risking deindexation?
Google states that removing links—even artificial ones—does not trigger any algorithmic alarm. A site losing visibility due to artificial backlinks will simply see that boost disappear, with no punitive action. In essence: cleaning up your link profile remains a neutral, if not beneficial, action but won't cause a magic rebound if the gains were artificial from the start.
What you need to understand
What Does "Not an Alarm Signal" Really Mean?
When John Mueller asserts that removing links is not an alarm signal, he confirms that Google is not actively monitoring the removal of backlinks to trigger a manual or algorithmic action. In other words, if you request the removal of 200 spammy links via a disavow file or by contacting webmasters, no red flags are raised at Google.
The nuance is important. What Google actually monitors is the impact of these links on your PageRank and ranking signals. If those artificial links boosted your rankings, their removal will mechanically lead to a loss of visibility—but without an algorithm actively penalizing you. The distinction is subtle yet essential: you're losing a gained advantage, not facing a punishment.
Why Does This Clarification Change the Game?
For years, SEOs have feared that a mass removal of backlinks could be interpreted as an admission of guilt. The idea was that by disavowing 1000 links at once, you would signal to Google: "Yes, I cheated, here’s the proof." This fear has hindered many link auditing efforts, especially for sites that have inherited dubious practices.
Mueller cuts through this anxiety. Removing toxic links does not expose you to any reprisals. It doesn't make you a suspect. It simply removes a signal—positive or negative—from the overall calculation of your authority. The real risk lies in doing nothing and allowing spammy links to pollute your profile, especially if a manual action is looming.
What’s the Difference Between Loss of Support and Penalty?
Loss of support is neutral from an algorithmic point of view. You had 100 PageRank points thanks to PBNs, you drop to 60. No penalty, just a return to a more organic level. A penalty is a punitive action: Google takes away 30 additional points because it detected an attempt at active manipulation.
Practically speaking, if you remove links before a manual action is imposed, you avoid the penalty. If you remove them afterward, you lift the sanction, but you only regain the level of visibility that is naturally due to you—not necessarily the level before the cheating. This is where some SEOs burn their fingers: they clean up, lose positions, and imagine they’ve been penalized when they’ve just lost the boosting effect.
- No Active Monitoring: Google does not track your link removals as an admission of guilt.
- Mechanical Loss, Not Punitive: A site losing artificial links returns to its real level, without further penalties.
- Cleaning = Neutral Action: Disavowing or removing backlinks does not trigger any negative filters.
- Delayed Impact: The loss of visibility occurs when Google recrawls and recalculates authority, not instantly.
- Manual Action ≠ Organic Loss: A Google Search Console penalty is a distinct event from the mere devaluation of a link.
SEO Expert opinion
Is This Statement Consistent with Field Observations?
Yes, but with major caveats. Across hundreds of link audits, it is indeed observed that sites cleaned of toxic links do not experience a drastic drop like a "Penguin filter." When done properly, positions stabilize or decrease gradually, without sudden collapses. This validates the idea that there is no alarm signal.
Where it gets tricky is in the timing and unpredictability. A site may lose 40% of organic traffic three months after a massive cleanup, simply because Google has finally recrawled the source pages and recalculated the PageRank. For clients, this appears like a penalty—except that it’s just reality catching up with artificially inflated positions. [To be verified]: Google never communicates on the timelines for disavow effectiveness, which adds to the confusion.
What Nuances Should Be Added to This Statement?
First point: Mueller talks about removing links, not their intrinsic quality. If you remove links, there is no problem. But if Google detects that those links were manipulated before you removed them, and a manual action is already in progress, the removal isn’t always enough. You must also submit a reconsideration request via Search Console. It’s not automatic.
Second nuance: the speed of removal matters. A site losing 2000 backlinks in 48 hours because a PBN network has been dismantled might see its positions drop violently, even if Google is not actively penalizing it. The algorithm interprets this volatility as a signal of depreciation of authority, which can trigger cascading re-evaluations. Technically, it's not an alarm—but the effect is the same.
In What Cases Does This Rule Not Apply?
If you are under a manual action for “artificial links to your site,” simply removing the links is not enough. You need to document every action taken, prove your efforts, and submit a formal request. Google expects a thorough cleanup, not a cosmetic one. Removing 50% of toxic links will not lift the penalty—and in this case, the algorithm is monitoring your reaction.
Another exception: interconnected site networks. If you drastically dismantle an internal link structure between 20 satellite sites, Google may interpret this as the end of a manipulation scheme—and decide to retroactively devalue the entire network. This isn’t an alarm in the classical sense, but it is a deep re-evaluation that can hurt badly.
Practical impact and recommendations
What Should You Actually Do After This Statement?
First, audit your backlink profile without panic. The idea isn’t to disavow everything out of caution but to identify links that bring you nothing—or worse, weaken you. Use Ahrefs, Majestic, or SEMrush to extract referring domains, then filter by low DR/TF, over-optimized anchors, and off-topic context. If a link comes from an adult site while you sell baby strollers, it’s a candidate for disavow.
Next, prioritize manual removal before disavowing. Contact webmasters politely to request removals. Google values proactive cleanup efforts. The disavow.txt file is a safety net, not a first-resort solution. And above all: document every attempt. If a manual action occurs, you’ll need to prove you’ve tried everything.
What Mistakes Should You Avoid When Cleaning Up Links?
Never disavow lightly. Some SEOs fall into the opposite excess: they throw 3000 domains into disavow without checking if those links had a real impact. The result: they cut legitimate authority sources and lose traffic. Always analyze the context: a link from a niche forum might look spammy on paper, but if it generates qualified traffic, keep it.
Another pitfall: cleaning too quickly after a manual action. Google wants to see a sustained and documented effort, not a disavow file of 10,000 lines submitted in a panic. Take the time to sort, contact, and justify. A hasty reconsideration request can be denied, and you lose weeks of visibility.
How Can You Check That Your Link Profile Remains Healthy?
Set up a monthly monitoring via Google Search Console (section "Links to Your Site"). Compare the evolution of the number of referring domains and spot suspicious spikes. If you gain 200 backlinks in a week without running a campaign, investigate: it could be negative SEO or a syndicated link looping back.
Also check the consistency of anchors. If 60% of your backlinks use the same exact anchor, it’s a red flag. Google may not have reacted yet, but it will come. Balance with branded anchors, naked URLs, and long-tail variations. And if you inherit a site with a dubious history, run a full audit before any growth strategy—it’s better to clean up than to build on sand.
- Export your backlink profile (Ahrefs, Majestic, GSC) and sort by DR/TF, anchors, and thematic.
- Manually contact webmasters to remove toxic links before using the disavow.
- Document every removal attempt: screenshots, emails, dates—essential for a reconsideration request.
- Only submit a disavow.txt file for links you couldn’t have removed manually.
- Never disavow a link without checking its real impact (traffic, context, domain authority).
- Plan for monthly monitoring of new backlinks via GSC or a third-party tool to detect anomalies.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Supprimer des liens toxiques via disavow peut-il déclencher une pénalité Google ?
Si je perds du trafic après un nettoyage de backlinks, est-ce une pénalité ?
Faut-il désavouer tous les liens de faible qualité par précaution ?
Combien de temps après un disavow Google prend-il en compte les changements ?
Le retrait manuel de liens est-il plus efficace que le disavow ?
🎥 From the same video 39
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 01/04/2021
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