Official statement
Other statements from this video 25 ▾
- 1:03 Should you stop blocking JavaScript scripts for Googlebot?
- 1:38 Should you block scripts for Googlebot to enhance perceived speed?
- 4:19 Does mobile loading speed really impact SEO while desktop is overlooked?
- 7:20 Why does Google change the color of URLs in the SERPs from green to gray?
- 9:23 Should you really use 'noindex' on the unfinished translations of your multilingual site?
- 9:35 Can the no-index be a temporary fix for your pages?
- 11:20 Should you really declare all URL variants in Search Console?
- 11:46 Should you really add both www and non-www versions to Google Search Console?
- 12:25 Does AMP provide a real SEO advantage when your site is already mobile-friendly?
- 13:44 Do desktop PWAs require specific SEO optimization?
- 14:04 Can AMP still enhance the performance of an already optimized mobile site?
- 15:34 Why does your site rank better on mobile than on desktop?
- 16:26 Why doesn't Google provide quality ratings in Search Console?
- 19:08 How can you display a mobile survey without harming your SEO?
- 19:31 Are mobile pop-ups really a Google penalty factor?
- 21:22 Do you really need to duplicate all your structured data on the mobile version?
- 21:48 Should you really duplicate 100% of your desktop content on mobile to avoid penalties?
- 23:59 How can you manage identical online stores across various domains without facing Google's penalties?
- 24:35 Does URL architecture really influence crawl depth by Google?
- 37:41 Should you prioritize 301 redirects or canonicals when moving content?
- 42:01 Why are the Search Console data never in sync with Google Analytics?
- 42:06 Why do the figures in Search Console never match Google Analytics?
- 44:58 How long does it really take to stabilize a site after a merger?
- 64:08 Does changing to a keyword-less domain harm your visibility on Google?
- 64:28 Does switching from a keyword-rich domain to a brand affect your SEO negatively?
Google confirms that mobile loading speed only matters for searches conducted on smartphones and officially becomes a ranking criterion starting in July. This signal only affects the slowest pages, and its impact remains minor compared to content relevance. Specifically, aim for a loading time under 3 seconds to avoid penalties without sacrificing content quality.
What you need to understand
Why does Google differentiate between mobile speed and desktop speed?
Since the shift to mobile-first indexing, Google crawls and indexes the mobile version of your pages as a priority. Thus, mobile loading speed becomes a standalone criterion, evaluated independently from desktop performance.
This distinction reflects differentiated usage: mobile connections remain more volatile, processors less powerful, and users are particularly sensitive to waiting times on small screens. Google adapts its criteria to this on-the-ground reality.
Does the signal apply to all mobile searches?
No, and here's where it gets interesting. John Mueller clarifies that this criterion only affects searches conducted from a mobile device. If a user searches on desktop, the mobile speed of your page does not come into play.
This means you need to segment your SEO analysis: a page can rank well on desktop despite a slow mobile version, but it risks dropping in mobile-only results. With 60-70% of traffic coming from mobile in various sectors, this is no longer negligible.
What is the actual significance of this criterion since July?
Mueller indicates a gradual rollout starting in July, suggesting a staggered roll-out rather than a big bang. In practice, Google has historically proceeded in geographical or thematic waves.
The phrase "expected to be effective" leaves a deliberate ambiguity. Google avoids communicating firm dates to maintain flexibility and to prevent manipulation attempts right before launch. This is typical of their controlled communication.
- Mobile-first indexing: the mobile version becomes the reference for all criteria, including speed
- Targeted binary criterion: only extremely slow pages are affected, not a fine gradation system
- Gradual rollout: the impact will be felt over several weeks, not overnight
- Limited effect on overall ranking: speed remains one signal among 200+ factors, with relatively low weight
- Priority relevance: a slow but highly relevant page can still rank ahead of a fast but mediocre page
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Yes, overall. A/B tests conducted on dozens of sites show that improvements in mobile speed rarely result in dramatic jumps in the SERPs. Instead, we observe micro-gains (2-5 positions) on highly competitive queries, where every detail counts.
The real impact is measured elsewhere: bounce rate, session time, conversions. Google captures these behavioral signals indirectly. A fast page may not rank better, but it keeps visitors on longer, which ultimately influences ranking through other mechanisms. This is an important nuance that Mueller does not elaborate on here.
What uncertainties remain in this communication?
Google remains vague about the exact threshold that triggers penalties. "Extremely slow" means nothing without numbers. Based on observed correlations, the threshold seems to be around 4-5 seconds for First Contentful Paint on 3G, but this is an extrapolation, not an official confirmation. [To be verified]
Another ambiguity: the relationship between this historic speed criterion and the later Core Web Vitals. Mueller discusses the initial signal prior to the introduction of LCP/FID/CLS. Do the two systems coexist? Do they replace each other? Google never clearly decides, likely to maintain algorithmic flexibility.
Should we downplay the importance of mobile speed?
Yes and no. If you are solely targeting ranking, speed remains a secondary criterion compared to content, backlinks, and search intent. Focus first on relevance, then on technique.
However, if you are thinking in terms of conversion and ROI, speed becomes critical. An additional second of delay costs an average of 7% in conversions according to Akamai studies. Google knows this, which is why it promotes this criterion despite its modest SEO impact: it enhances overall user experience, thus improving satisfaction with search results.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should be prioritized for mobile?
Start by measuring your actual speed on mobile with PageSpeed Insights in mobile mode, not desktop. Test from various geographical locations if you target an international audience. Variations can be enormous between a Parisian fiber connection and African 3G.
Focus on the critical rendering path: anything that blocks the initial display. Inline CSS for above-the-fold styles, deferred or async JavaScript, lazy loading images outside the viewport. These are the quick wins with the best effort/result ratio.
How to avoid classic mobile optimization mistakes?
Mistake #1: optimizing only the homepage and neglecting deep pages that generate SEO traffic. Check your main organic landing pages, not just the storefront.
Mistake #2: compressing images to the point of degrading visual quality. On mobile, the screen is small but often high resolution (Retina). Find the right balance between weight and clarity, ideally using WebP and adaptive srcsets.
Mistake #3: piling on optimization plugins that interfere with each other. A caching plugin + a minification plugin + a poorly configured CDN can create more problems than they solve. Prefer an integrated solution or a clean technical audit.
What performance level should you aim for to stay comfortable?
Aim for a First Contentful Paint under 2.5 seconds and a Speed Index under 4 seconds on slow 3G (Fast 3G profile in Chrome DevTools). You will comfortably exceed the potential penalty threshold.
Don't seek a 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights, this is often counterproductive. A score between 70 and 85 is more than sufficient if your content is solid and the user experience remains smooth. Google does not penalize 'moderately fast' sites, only the really slow ones.
- Audit mobile speed with PageSpeed Insights and WebPageTest (3G profile)
- Identify blocking resources (non-deferred CSS, JS) in the critical path
- Compress and serve images in WebP with adaptive srcset
- Enable Gzip/Brotli compression and browser caching on the server
- Minimize external requests (fonts, analytics, tracking) that slow down rendering
- Test the real impact on the bounce rate and session time before/after optimization
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
La vitesse desktop n'a-t-elle plus aucun impact sur le SEO ?
À partir de quel seuil de lenteur mon site est-il pénalisé ?
Ce critère vitesse est-il lié aux Core Web Vitals ?
Faut-il sacrifier des fonctionnalités pour gagner en vitesse ?
Un site e-commerce avec beaucoup d'images peut-il être rapide sur mobile ?
🎥 From the same video 25
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h06 · published on 01/06/2018
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