Official statement
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Martin Splitt states that Google can automatically canonicalize very similar pages, regardless of declared canonical tags. For seasonal or annual content, it's better to update the existing page rather than multiply URLs. The implication: your canonical tags may be ignored if Google detects content duplication, even if intentional.
What you need to understand
Why does Google canonicalize pages against your wishes?
Automatic canonicalization is a defensive mechanism by Google against content duplication. When the algorithm detects multiple URLs with nearly identical content, it chooses which version to index, regardless of the canonical directives you've put in place.
Splitt highlights the typical example of recurring seasonal content — skincare routines, annual shopping guides, year-end summaries. If you publish a new page each year with 80% the same content, Google may choose to index only one of them. And it may not be the one you intended.
What differentiates this statement from usual canonical advice?
Until now, the official documentation presented the canonical tag as a strong directive. In practice, many SEOs considered it a reliable signal, particularly in self-canonicals. Splitt nuances this: Google reserves the right to override your preferences if its algorithm deems the content too similar.
This is an explicit confirmation that the canonical tag remains a signal, not an absolute directive. Google always has the final say, especially when faced with duplication patterns it interprets as spam or manipulation.
What alternative does Google recommend?
The recommended solution is simple on paper: update the existing page instead of creating a new URL every year. In practice, this means modifying the content in place, updating dates, data, examples, and potentially repositioning the page within the structure if necessary.
The underlying idea: a unique URL that evolves over time accumulates more trust signals (links, click history, age) than a succession of new pages with fragmented SEO equity. Google prefers this consolidated approach, which also limits crawl load and indexing ambiguities.
- Google may ignore your canonical tags if the content is deemed too similar across multiple URLs
- Automatic canonicalization does not solely depend on your directives but on the engine's semantic analysis
- It's better to have a strong evolving page than a multitude of weak pages with redundant content
- This logic mainly applies to seasonal content, annual guides, recurring summaries
- Repositioning within the structure is an acceptable option if the URL remains the same or redirects properly
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes, and it's even a welcome confirmation of behavior observed for years. There are regular cases where Google indexes a different URL than the one marked as canonical, particularly on e-commerce sites with product variations or news sites with republished content.
What’s interesting here is the clarification of the criterion: content similarity takes precedence over the directive. Google isn’t saying, "we sometimes ignore canonicals," it says, "we ignore them when the content is too close." A crucial nuance for diagnosing indexing problems: if your canonical is ignored, first look for semantic duplication, not a technical bug.
What cases does this rule not apply to?
This statement clearly targets voluntary recurring content — annual guides, reports, predictable editorial calendars. It does not cover cases of accidental technical duplication (URL parameters, sessions, pagination pages) where canonical remains a relevant and generally respected signal.
Similarly, for substantially different content despite a similar structure (e.g., iPhone 14 vs. iPhone 15 comparison), creating two distinct pages remains legitimate. The exact similarity threshold that triggers forced canonicalization remains unclear — [To be verified] on your own cases with Search Console tests.
What nuances should be added to this advice?
Updating an existing page can pose editorial consistency and UX issues. If your “skincare routine” content references discontinued products, past trends, or dated events, the update can create inconsistency. You then have to decide: complete rewrite (time-consuming) or new page (risk of canonicalization).
Another point: the repositioning within the structure mentioned by Splitt. Changing a page’s URL (even with a 301 redirect) breaks its direct link history, social shares, and age signals. This is not trivial. If the URL really needs to change, ensure the relevance gain in structure compensates for the loss of SEO equity.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done practically for seasonal content?
Start by auditing your recurring content: annual guides, top 10 lists, reports, calendars. For each, ask yourself: does this content provide unique value each year, or is it an update of the previous one? If it's an update, consolidate it on a unique evolving URL.
Technically, this means: keep the same URL, modify the content thoroughly (not just changing the year in the title), update factual data, and potentially adjust the slug or category if the theme has evolved. Remember to update title tags, meta descriptions, and structured dates to signal freshness.
How can you prevent Google from canonicalizing your pages against your wishes?
The only reliable way to avoid forced canonicalization is to substantially differentiate the content. It’s not just about adding a paragraph or changing a date—there must be a distinct editorial angle, different examples, and a rethought structure. If you can't achieve this differentiation threshold (which Google does not publicly quantify — [To be verified] empirically), then consolidate.
Monitor your pages via Search Console: if a page is indexed with a canonical different from the one declared, it's a warning signal. Check the coverage report, the inspected URLs, and compare the content of the pages in question. If the similarity is too strong, merge or redirect.
What mistakes should be avoided when updating existing pages?
Don’t fall into the trap of cosmetic updates: just changing the year in the H1 and republishing. Google detects semantic similarity, not just isolated word differences. If your update is superficial, it may even degrade your rankings by diluting the historical relevance of the page.
Avoid changing the URL without a strategic reason. If your page /skincare-routine is performing well, there's no need to rename it /updated-skincare-routine or move it to a new category just to signal freshness. The repositioning mentioned by Splitt concerns cases where the page's theme justifies a change in position within the structure, not a marketing renaming.
- Identify all recurring content published each year on distinct URLs
- For each series, decide: consolidation on an evolving URL or justified independent pages
- If consolidating: update the content thoroughly, not just the dates
- Update titles, meta descriptions, structured dates (lastModified, datePublished)
- 301 redirect old versions to the consolidated version if applicable
- Monitor Search Console to detect undesired forced canonicalizations
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google peut-il vraiment ignorer ma balise canonical même si elle est techniquement correcte ?
Comment savoir si mon contenu est trop similaire pour justifier plusieurs pages ?
Dois-je supprimer toutes mes anciennes pages de guides annuels ?
Mettre à jour une page existante ne risque-t-il pas de perdre son historique SEO ?
Le repositionnement dans l'arborescence mentionné par Splitt implique-t-il un changement d'URL ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 13 min · published on 09/09/2020
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