Official statement
Other statements from this video 21 ▾
- 1:22 Is it true that Google delays mobile-first migration for some sites?
- 5:13 Should you really prioritize every Search Console issue as a crisis?
- 7:07 Do you really need to optimize internal link anchors, or is it a waste of time?
- 8:42 Should you really avoid having multiple pages for the same keyword?
- 9:58 Can you really prove the editorial quality of your content to Google with structured data tags?
- 11:33 Do you really need to stick to the supported page types for the reviewed-by schema?
- 14:02 Is Google really tolerant of technical cloaking?
- 19:36 How does Google group your URLs to prioritize crawling?
- 22:04 Why does your traffic really drop after a publishing break?
- 24:16 Why is Google Discover more demanding than traditional search for showcasing your content?
- 26:31 Does unsupported structured data really affect ranking?
- 28:37 Do technical errors on a main domain really penalize its subdomains?
- 30:44 Why do your review snippets seem to disappear and then reappear every week?
- 32:16 Is Domain Authority Really Useless for Your SEO Strategy?
- 32:16 Are manually posted backlinks in forums and comments really useless for SEO?
- 34:55 Why aren't all your Disqus comments indexed in the same way?
- 44:52 Is Google really confusing your local pages with duplicates because of URL patterns?
- 48:00 Why do 404 redirects to the homepage destroy crawl budget?
- 50:51 Should you really use unavailable_after to manage past events on your site?
- 50:51 Why does your massive no-index take 6 months to a year to be processed by Google?
- 55:39 Do flat URLs really hinder Google's understanding?
Google states that migrating to mobile-first indexing provides no direct ranking advantage. It is merely a change in indexing method: Googlebot crawls the mobile version instead of the desktop version. For an SEO, this means ensuring content parity between both versions, but without expecting a miraculous boost in the SERPs once the transition is made.
What you need to understand
What is mobile-first indexing all about?
Mobile-first indexing refers to Google primarily using the mobile version of a site for indexing and ranking. Before this change, the bot scraped the desktop version, even if the user was searching from their smartphone.
This switch does not alter how Google ranks pages. It only changes which version of the site is crawled and analyzed. If your mobile and desktop content is identical (responsive), you will see no visible difference.
Why does Google emphasize the absence of ranking advantage?
Because many SEOs mistakenly believed that being migrated to mobile-first was a quality signal that would boost rankings. This is false.
Mobile-first indexing is not a ranking factor. It neither improves nor harms your positions. What matters is the quality of mobile content: if it is equivalent to the desktop, everything remains stable. If it is truncated, you will lose positions.
Is there really urgency to force this migration?
No. Google gradually migrates sites according to its own schedule. Forcing the migration via Search Console will bring you no benefit in terms of visibility.
The urgency lies elsewhere: ensure that your mobile version contains all content, structured tags, meta tags, and internal linking. If so, the migration will occur naturally without turbulence.
- Mobile-first indexing changes which version Google crawls, not how it ranks pages
- No ranking boost is given after migration
- Content parity between mobile and desktop is the only real technical requirement
- Forcing the migration is pointless if the site is not ready
- A well-designed responsive site will not experience any position fluctuations
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, generally. Migrations observed since 2018 show that well-designed responsive sites experience no traffic fluctuations. No increase, no decrease. This is exactly what Mueller states.
On the other hand, sites with degraded mobile versions (hidden content, poorly implemented lazy-load, truncated text) have lost ground. Not due to the migration itself, but because Google was now indexing a deprived version. [To be verified]: Google has never published numerical data on the rate of negatively affected sites.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller refers to a direct ranking advantage. This is technically correct, but it masks a crucial point: if your mobile site is less rich than your desktop, you will lose positions after migration. This is not a “mobile-first penalty,” it is just that Google is indexing a lower-quality content.
Another nuance: some sites have seen an indirect improvement after revamping their mobile for the migration. Better UX, reduced load times, improved Core Web Vitals. Mobile-first is not the direct cause of the gain, but it has forced optimizations that paid off.
In what situations does this rule not apply?
If you have a site with separate URLs (m.example.com), the migration may reveal previously invisible content discrepancies. Google crawled the desktop, indexed everything, ranked well. Then it crawls the mobile, discovers that 30% of the content is missing, and adjusts the positions accordingly.
Another exception: sites with infinite scroll or poorly configured lazy-load. Googlebot mobile does not always trigger JavaScript like a real user. The result: some content is not crawled, hence not indexed, hence absent from the SERPs. This is not an issue of mobile-first itself, but the migration exposes it abruptly.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be checked before the mobile-first migration?
First reflex: compare the indexable content between the desktop and mobile versions. Use the URL inspection tool in Search Console on both user agents (desktop and smartphone). Ensure the rendered DOM is identical.
Next, make sure that structured tags (Schema.org, Open Graph) are present in mobile. That the meta title, description, and canonical are exactly the same. That images have their alt attributes. That the internal linking is not truncated in an inaccessible burger menu for the bot.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided?
Do not hide content behind poorly implemented accordions or tabs. Google indexes what is in the DOM, but if the text is in display:none by default without an expansion mechanism, it may be ignored or deprioritized.
Do not rely on lazy-load that only triggers on user scroll. Googlebot mobile scrolls little, if at all. If your images, videos, or blocks of text only load on scroll, they may never be crawled. Switch to eager loading or use Intersection Observer with a low threshold.
How to check if my site is ready for mobile-first?
Use the Mobile-Friendly Test and the URL inspection tool in mobile mode. Compare the rendered HTML with the desktop version. If you notice discrepancies, correct them before Google forces the migration.
Next, analyze your server logs. Identify crawls from Googlebot Smartphone. If they are increasing gradually, it means Google is preparing the switch. Use this opportunity to ensure that all critical pages are crawled and rendered correctly.
- Compare the rendered mobile vs desktop DOM using the Search Console inspection tool
- Check for the presence of meta tags, Schema.org, and canonical in mobile
- Ensure that internal linking is complete and accessible (not just in a burger menu)
- Test lazy-load: images and critical content should load without user scroll
- Analyze logs to detect the increase in Googlebot Smartphone crawls
- Manually validate on a real device, not just in Chrome DevTools responsive mode
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que passer en mobile-first indexing améliore mon référencement ?
Dois-je forcer la migration de mon site en mobile-first via Search Console ?
Comment savoir si mon site est déjà en mobile-first indexing ?
Un site responsive est-il automatiquement compatible mobile-first ?
Que se passe-t-il si ma version mobile contient moins de contenu que la desktop ?
🎥 From the same video 21
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 23/06/2020
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