Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 2:25 Why does your mobile-friendly page suddenly lose its mobile-compatible label?
- 4:37 Does the Mobile-Friendly Test Tool really detect all the errors that impact your mobile SEO?
- 8:35 Is server-side rendering still essential for quickly indexing dynamic content?
- 10:51 Can Google ignore your desktop canonical in mobile-first indexing?
- 15:25 Why don't your social profiles show up in Google Knowledge Panels?
- 16:36 How many links can Google really crawl per page without harming your SEO?
- 18:49 Why do your rankings and featured snippets consistently crash after publication?
- 21:50 How can you monitor your crawl budget when Google doesn't provide accurate data?
- 27:00 Should you really fix all the broken external links pointing to your site?
- 31:26 Should you really disavow dubious backlinks, or does Google ignore them automatically?
- 34:46 Should you really update the modification dates in structured data?
- 37:23 Do redirect loops really disrupt Googlebot's crawling?
- 39:14 Do videos really enhance the SEO of news websites?
- 42:10 Should you really create a separate URL for each product variant?
Google states that a noindex page temporarily passes PageRank through its outbound links, but in the long run, it will be completely excluded from crawling — links included. This means that if you rely on noindex pages to distribute your SEO juice to strategic pages, you are racing against the clock. The challenge is to quickly identify and migrate all critical links to truly indexable pages before Google permanently ignores them.
What you need to understand
Why does Google temporarily track links from a noindex page?
When you mark a page with noindex, Google still crawls it for a while. During this transitional phase, the engine analyzes the outbound links and may pass some PageRank to the targets of these links.
This buffer period allows Googlebot to understand the site's architecture and not abruptly cut off the crawl paths to indexable content. However, this leniency has a limited lifespan — and Mueller doesn’t provide a specific timeframe.
What happens in the long run with these noindex pages?
Once Google deems it has crawled the noindex page sufficiently, it stops visiting it regularly. Outbound links are no longer followed, PageRank is no longer circulated, and the page becomes a dead end in the link graph.
Specifically, if you have placed important internal links from a noindex page — such as an old deindexed content retained for historical purposes — these links will eventually be completely ignored by the engine. The crawl budget turns away from them, and target pages lose a source of internal popularity.
What are the implications for a site's SEO architecture?
Mueller's statement imposes a simple rule: every critical link for indexing must reside on an indexable page. This includes your strategic internal linking, links to deep pages, or any link serving as a bridge to important sections of the site.
If you use noindex pages as navigation hubs — think e-commerce facet filters, sorting pages, or archived content — you must anticipate that these structures will soon cease to pass anything. The risk? Strategic pages become orphaned de facto, as their only crawlable access disappears.
- Temporary does not mean reliable: Google does not guarantee any precise timeline before stopping link tracking.
- Noindex pages eventually get ignored by crawlers, including their outbound links.
- Every critical link must be on an indexable page to ensure PageRank transmission and crawling of the targets.
- Noindex navigation hubs (filters, sorts) are not sustainable solutions for structuring internal linking.
- The crawl budget focuses on indexable pages — noindex pages eventually get excluded.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed realities?
Yes, and that is precisely what makes it valuable. For years, we have observed that noindex pages are crawled for a variable amount of time — from a few weeks to several months — before gradually disappearing from logs. The crawl frequency decreases, then almost completely stops.
What Mueller clarifies here is that this disappearance also concerns outbound links. In practice, we see that strategic pages do indeed become orphaned when their only internal access came from an old noindex page. Internal PageRank no longer circulates, and some deep pages stop being crawled regularly. [To be confirmed]: Google does not provide any temporal threshold — it’s impossible to know if "long term" means 3 months or 12 months depending on the site’s crawl budget.
What nuances should be added to this rule?
Mueller talks about "completely ignored" pages, but the reality is more nuanced. A noindex page may still appear sporadically in crawl logs — for instance, if it is linked from a freshly indexed page. However, this residual crawl does not guarantee any transmission of PageRank.
Another nuance: noindex, index pages can sometimes appear in SERPs if they are heavily linked from external sources. But even in such cases, their ability to transmit SEO juice internally remains compromised in the long run. If you have relied on noindex pages to structure your internal linking, you are playing with fire — and without a clear temporal safety net.
In which cases does this rule pose a major problem?
E-commerce sites with noindex facets are the most affected. If you have hundreds of noindex filter pages, and these pages contain the only links to certain niche product listings, those products will end up orphaned. Google will no longer crawl them, their internal PageRank collapses, and their SEO visibility follows suit.
The same issue arises for media sites with deindexed archives still available online. If these archives contain links to recent articles or thematic files, these links cease to count. The result: strategic content loses crawlable entry points, and their performance suffers.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should be taken to secure internal linking?
First, audit all the noindex pages on your site. Extract them through a crawl (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl), and identify those that contain links to strategic pages. If a noindex page points to a key product listing, a pillar page, or an evergreen article, you have a problem.
Then, duplicate these links on indexable pages. For example, if a noindex e-commerce filter contains the only link to a niche product, add this link to an indexable category, a contextual menu, or a recommendations block. The goal is to ensure at least one crawlable path from a truly indexed page.
What mistakes should be avoided in managing noindex pages?
A common mistake is to believe that noindex is a clean solution for managing duplicate or low-value content. While it prevents indexing, in the long term, it disrupts the internal linking structure. If you massively noindex filter or pagination pages, make sure they are not the only access points to important content.
Another trap is to leave noindex pages in the XML sitemap. Google eventually ignores them completely, sending a confusing signal about your architecture. Clean your sitemap, keep only indexable pages, and ensure that your critical internal links reside on those pages.
How can I verify that my site complies with this recommendation?
Use a crawl tool to generate an internal link graph. Isolate the noindex pages, and trace the crawl paths to the strategic pages. If certain key pages are only accessible via noindex, you have a gap in your architecture.
Then, monitor the server logs. If noindex pages continue to be crawled regularly after several months, it means Google still finds them useful — but this won’t last. Conversely, if they disappear from the logs, it’s a signal that their links no longer matter. Act before it impacts your target pages.
- Crawl your site and identify all pages marked as noindex
- Analyze the outbound links from these noindex pages to strategic content
- Duplicate every critical link on an indexable page (category, menu, contextual block)
- Clean your XML sitemap: remove all noindex URLs
- Monitor server logs to detect the decline in crawling of noindex pages
- Regularly check that your strategic pages have at least one crawlable path from an indexable page
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps Google continue-t-il à suivre les liens d'une page noindex ?
Une page noindex transmet-elle du PageRank pendant la phase transitoire ?
Que se passe-t-il si une page noindex est mon seul lien vers une page stratégique ?
Faut-il retirer toutes les pages noindex du sitemap XML ?
Puis-je utiliser des pages noindex comme hubs de navigation interne ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 53 min · published on 14/12/2018
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