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Official statement

Having numerous 404 errors on your site won't stop Google from indexing other pages, but it can affect crawl efficiency by wasting your bandwidth.
49:52
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h05 💬 EN 📅 15/06/2017 ✂ 10 statements
Watch on YouTube (49:52) →
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Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that a high number of 404 errors does not prevent the indexing of other pages on the site. The real issue lies with the crawl budget: these unreachable pages waste the crawling resources that Googlebot could allocate to strategic content. For medium and large sites, this statement emphasizes the importance of monitoring the proportion of 404 errors in server logs rather than panicking over every broken URL.

What you need to understand

Why does Google distinguish between indexing and crawl efficiency?

The confusion often arises from a misunderstanding of the crawling sequence. Indexing refers to Google's ability to discover, analyze, and store your strategic pages in its index. Crawl budget, on the other hand, represents the volume of requests that Googlebot is willing to send to your server over a given period.

A 404 error does not block the indexing of valid pages: if your internal linking and XML sitemap point to existing content, those URLs will be crawled normally. What Google highlights here is that a site riddled with 404 errors wastes crawling resources on dead ends. The result is that there is less crawl available for the pages that really matter.

What is the critical threshold at which 404s become problematic?

Google does not provide any specific numbers, which complicates decision-making. In practice, it all depends on the size of the site and its assigned crawl budget. A 500-page blog with 20 404 errors will not suffer any measurable impact. An e-commerce site with 50,000 references that detects 5,000 broken URLs every week in the logs starts to suffer.

The real criterion is the ratio of crawled valid pages to 404 errors in your server logs. If Googlebot spends 30% of its time on 404s, you have an architecture problem. If this ratio remains below 5%, the impact is minimal for most sites.

How do these 404 errors actually consume your bandwidth?

Each time Googlebot requests a 404 URL, your server must generate a complete HTTP response, including rendering your custom error page. On shared hosting or a server with limited resources, thousands of 404s crawled daily can overwhelm processing capacity.

This unnecessary load slows down the overall server response time, prompting Google to reduce crawl frequency to avoid degrading the user experience. It's a vicious cycle: the more your server struggles, the less Google crawls your fresh or updated pages.

  • 404 errors do not block the indexing of valid pages on the site.
  • They consume crawl budget that could be allocated to strategic content.
  • The impact depends on the absolute volume of 404s and the ratio compared to crawled valid pages.
  • A server overwhelmed by 404s sees its crawl frequency reduced by Google.
  • Monitoring server logs is essential to measure the actual extent of the problem.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with real-world observations?

In essence, Google's claim is accurate: I have seen sites with thousands of 404s continue to index new pages normally. As long as the internal linking and XML sitemap remain clean, Googlebot finds its way. The nuance that Google intentionally omits is that certain types of 404s cause more problems than others.

404s from broken internal links are much more toxic than obsolete URLs found through external backlinks or previous crawls. If your main navigation points to dead ends, you fragment internal PageRank and degrade user experience. Google doesn’t explicitly state this, but crawls of sites with many internal 404s show a measurable decrease in crawl frequency within weeks.

Which use cases render this rule ineffective?

This statement applies to a mature site with a stable architecture. It becomes completely irrelevant for a seasonal e-commerce site that massively unpublishes references at the end of a collection, or a listings platform where 40% of the catalog disappears every month. In these setups, 404s are not a bug; they are structural.

The problem is that Google continues to crawl these missing URLs for weeks, sometimes months, before finally removing them from its index. In the meantime, your crawl budget is going to waste. [To be verified]: Google claims it automatically adjusts crawl frequency based on observed patterns, but real-world data shows a long adaptation delay, especially for medium-sized sites without unlimited crawl budgets.

Should you really ignore 404s if indexing is working?

No, and this is where Google's communication becomes ambiguous. Saying that 404s do not prevent indexing does not mean you should let them accumulate without monitoring. A professional site monitors its 404s for two reasons: to preserve its crawl budget and to avoid deteriorating user experience.

The critical question is to prioritize: fix urgent 404s from internal links, redirect 301 those receiving traffic or quality backlinks, and let obsolete URLs without value die naturally. Google will never provide you with this level of granularity in its official statements.

Warning: this statement may encourage some junior SEOs to completely neglect 404 errors. In reality, regular 404 audits remain a good practice, especially for sites with over 10,000 pages where the volume of errors can explode without anyone noticing.

Practical impact and recommendations

How do you identify the 404s that are truly wasting your crawl budget?

Start by cross-referencing three data sources: Search Console (Coverage tab), your server logs, and a crawler like Screaming Frog or OnCrawl. The Search Console shows you the 404s Google has recently tried to crawl, this is your first alert. Server logs reveal the actual volume of requests from Googlebot to these broken URLs.

The internal crawler helps to identify broken internal links, those which fragment your PageRank and degrade UX. Focus your efforts on three types: 404s heavily crawled by Google (server logs), 404s accessible from internal navigation (crawler), and 404s with quality incoming backlinks (Search Console + Ahrefs/Majestic).

What corrective actions provide the best ROI?

Prioritize based on impact. 404s from internal links should be fixed immediately: update the link or remove it. 404s with quality external backlinks deserve a 301 redirect to the most relevant equivalent page, not to the homepage out of laziness.

For obsolete URLs with no traffic or backlinks, let them return a true 404 code (or 410 if you want to speed up deindexing). Do not redirect them systematically, as this creates unnecessary redirect chains and dilutes the signal for Google. Finally, if the volume of 404s spikes after a migration or redesign, submit a clean XML sitemap to accelerate Googlebot's reassessment of your site.

How do you monitor the evolution of this issue over time?

Implement automated monitoring: monthly exports of 404s from Search Console, alert if the volume increases by more than 20% month-over-month. Analyze your server logs to measure the share of crawl budget consumed by 404 errors (404 requests / total Googlebot requests ratio).

If this ratio exceeds 10% on a medium or large site, trigger a complete audit. Use server response time data to check that 404s do not degrade your overall performance. A server that struggles to generate error pages will see its crawl budget reduced, even if valid pages remain indexed.

  • Audit your internal links with a crawler to eliminate 404s accessible via navigation.
  • Analyze server logs to measure the ratio of crawl budget consumed by 404 errors.
  • Redirect with a 301 only those 404s with residual traffic or quality backlinks.
  • Allow worthless obsolete URLs to return a clean 404 code without forced redirection.
  • Submit an updated XML sitemap to speed up the reassessment of your architecture by Google.
  • Set up monthly monitoring of the volume of 404s detected by Search Console.
404 errors do not block indexing, but a professional site monitors them to preserve its crawl budget and user experience. Focus your efforts on internal 404s and those still receiving traffic or backlinks. Let worthless obsolete URLs naturally fade away. These optimizations require sharp technical expertise and regular monitoring: if your site exceeds 10,000 pages or undergoes frequent redesigns, engaging a specialized SEO agency can save you valuable time and help avoid costly crawl budget mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une page en 404 peut-elle disparaître de l'index Google ?
Oui, Google finit par désindexer les URLs qui retournent un code 404 de manière persistante. Le délai varie selon la fréquence de crawl du site, mais comptez plusieurs semaines à plusieurs mois pour une suppression complète.
Faut-il rediriger toutes les erreurs 404 vers la homepage ?
Non, c'est même contre-productif. Redirections massives vers la homepage diluent le signal et créent une mauvaise expérience utilisateur. Redirigez uniquement vers une page équivalente pertinente, ou laissez le 404 si aucune alternative n'existe.
Les 404 dans la Search Console impactent-elles le ranking ?
Pas directement. Une erreur 404 signale simplement que la page n'existe plus. En revanche, si ces 404 consomment massivement votre crawl budget ou cassent votre maillage interne, l'impact indirect sur le ranking devient mesurable.
Comment accélérer la désindexation d'une URL en 404 ?
Retournez un code HTTP 410 (Gone) au lieu d'un 404. Google interprète le 410 comme une suppression définitive et désindexe plus rapidement. Vous pouvez aussi retirer l'URL de votre sitemap XML et supprimer les liens internes qui pointent vers elle.
Un grand nombre de 404 peut-il déclencher une pénalité manuelle ?
Non, les erreurs 404 ne déclenchent jamais de pénalité manuelle. Google les considère comme un événement normal du web. Le seul risque est une baisse d'efficacité du crawl, pas une sanction algorithmique ou humaine.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO

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