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Official statement

Google reviews link building strategies via iframes and 'Powered By' to ensure they provide a choice for the webmaster. It could be problematic if the link is mandatory and non-removable.
11:04
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h05 💬 EN 📅 15/08/2014 ✂ 14 statements
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📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google closely examines link patterns inserted via iframes or 'Powered By' badges, especially when these links are enforced with no option for removal. The SEO challenge is to distinguish legitimate mentions from automated link building strategies. If the webmaster has no control over the link, Google may view this practice as manipulative and penalize the beneficiary site.

What you need to understand

Why does Google care about links in iframes?

Iframes allow the injection of external content onto a page without the webmaster necessarily being aware of what is present. A widget, a free tool, or a plugin can embed an iframe containing a discreet link to the provider's site.

Google seeks to determine whether this link results from a deliberate editorial choice by the webmaster or a mere automatic installation. If the link is enforced without alternatives, it falls into a gray area where PageRank manipulation becomes plausible.

What is a 'Powered By' link and why is it problematic?

The mentions 'Powered By' or 'Made with' often accompany free tools: CMS, plugins, chat widgets, image galleries. These links point to the provider's site, sometimes in dofollow, and accumulate on thousands of sites.

The problem arises when the webmaster cannot remove the link without breaking the service or violating the terms of use. Google sees it as a disguised link building strategy rather than a natural citation.

How does Google assess the mandatory nature of a link?

Mueller emphasizes the notion of choice. If the user can disable the link in the settings, set it to nofollow, or remove it without losing functionality, Google usually sees no malice.

Conversely, if the link is hardcoded into the iframe, hidden in minified code, or protected by a contractual clause, the engine may consider it a non-editorial link and treat it as such.

  • Iframe + mandatory link = risk of devaluation or manual penalty if the scale is significant
  • Explicit webmaster choice = link considered legitimate even if massive
  • Links in the terms of use or legal mentions remain tolerated if they are nofollow
  • Google may ignore iframe links if they come from a blacklisted domain or one known for spam
  • The provider's transparency plays a role: documenting the removal option protects both sides

SEO Expert opinion

Is Google's position consistent with observed practices?

Yes and no. On paper, Google has advocated for editorial freedom for years and penalizes automated link patterns. In practice, thousands of sites display 'Powered By' links in dofollow without ever facing visible penalties.

The real question is: at what threshold does Google intervene? A provider with 500 iframe links likely gains PageRank without concern. Another with 50,000 identical links on low-quality sites might trigger an algorithmic alert. [To verify] Google has never communicated a precise figure.

What nuances should be added to this rule?

Not all 'Powered By' links are created equal. A respected open-source CMS displaying a discreet link in the footer carries a cultural legitimacy: the community understands this as a form of credit, not an SEO trick.

Conversely, a free commercial widget that injects a dofollow link anchored on a commercial keyword ('best CRM 2023') without a removal option tells a different story. Google may see this as an undeclared value exchange: free service for a backlink.

When does this rule not really apply?

Legal mentions, mandatory photo credits (Creative Commons licenses), and technical attributions (third-party APIs) generally fall outside the scope. Google knows a site using the Google Maps API will display a Google logo.

Let's be honest: if your link is nofollow, nobody will come bother you. If you leave the choice in the documentation and 80% of users keep the link in dofollow, you're in a tolerated zone.

Attention: Manual actions for 'unnatural outgoing links' sometimes target sites hosting the iframes, not just the beneficiary. If Google detects a massive pattern, both parties can face consequences.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do if you provide a service with an embedded link?

Clearly document how to remove or modify the link in your terms of use and technical documentation. Offer a nofollow option by default, allowing the user to enable dofollow if they consciously wish to.

If your business model relies on these links (freemium, open-source), inform users transparently: 'By using the free version, you agree to display a link to our site.' This explicit consent changes the game in Google's eyes.

How do you verify that your site does not host problematic iframe links?

Inspect the source code of your pages to identify third-party iframes: chat widgets, video players, galleries, social counters. Check if these iframes contain dofollow links to external domains.

Use a tool like Screaming Frog in JavaScript rendering mode to capture dynamically generated links. If you spot links you haven’t chosen, contact the provider or replace the service.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this setup?

Never hide the link from users while keeping it visible for Googlebot (cloaking). Do not anchor the link on optimized commercial keywords. Avoid multiplying iframes on the same page if each contains a dofollow link.

Avoid aggressive contractual clauses ('You agree to never remove this link under penalty of prosecution'). Google could interpret this as evidence of intentional manipulation.

  • Audit all third-party widgets and iframes installed on your site
  • Ensure each external link is justified and, if possible, in nofollow
  • Document withdrawal or modification options for your own tools
  • Monitor your backlink profile: a sudden spike in iframe links can alert Google
  • Regularly consult the Search Console for manual actions on links
  • Prefer transparent partnerships over opaque automated systems
'Powered By' links under iframes are not inherently forbidden, but their mandatory nature and scale can trigger penalties. The key is to offer a real choice for the webmaster and document this option. If you deploy a large-scale strategy, switch to nofollow or accept the risk of algorithmic devaluation. These technical and legal subtleties can quickly become complex to manage in-house, especially if your link network extends across thousands of sites. Engaging an SEO agency specialized in backlink audits and compliance with Google guidelines can help anticipate risks and structure your link strategy sustainably.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un lien 'Powered By' en nofollow dans une iframe pose-t-il un problème ?
Non, si le lien est en nofollow, Google ne le considère pas comme un signal de classement et n'a aucune raison de sanctionner. Le nofollow neutralise le risque de manipulation de PageRank.
Google peut-il pénaliser un site qui héberge des iframes avec liens obligatoires ?
Oui, si Google détecte un schéma massif de liens non éditoriaux, le site hébergeur peut recevoir une action manuelle pour 'liens sortants non naturels'. C'est rare mais documenté.
Comment savoir si mes backlinks proviennent d'iframes ?
Utilise la Search Console section 'Liens' et croise avec un crawler comme Ahrefs ou Majestic. Si de nombreux backlinks proviennent de pages identiques avec le même code source, c'est probablement un iframe.
Les crédits photographiques obligatoires tombent-ils sous cette règle ?
Non, les attributions imposées par une licence (Creative Commons par exemple) sont considérées comme légitimes. Google fait la différence entre obligation légale et stratégie SEO déguisée.
Faut-il supprimer tous mes liens 'Made with' existants ?
Pas nécessairement. Si tu n'as jamais reçu d'alerte et que tes liens sont discrets, en footer, sur des sites de qualité, le risque reste faible. Surveille simplement ton profil de backlinks et privilégie le nofollow pour les nouveaux déploiements.
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