Official statement
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Google can impose manual actions on sites that allow spam to proliferate in their comments. This policy aims to penalize negligent webmasters who turn their discussion spaces into dumping grounds for unwanted links. Essentially, a site with thousands of unmoderated spam comments risks partial or total de-indexing, even if the main content is flawless.
What you need to understand
Why does Google penalize sites that do not moderate their comments?
Comment sections have become prime targets for link spammers. A popular blog post may receive hundreds of automated comments containing backlinks to casino, pharmaceutical, or adult sites. Google considers that allowing these links to remain active amounts to actively participating in a spam scheme.
The logic is straightforward: if your site disseminates thousands of outgoing links to dubious sites, you become complicit in the spam. The algorithm does not distinguish between 'I forgot to moderate' and 'I monetize my traffic by selling comments.' The result is the same: dilution of the site's trust and a risk of manual action.
What’s the difference between algorithmic action and manual action on this topic?
Algorithmic action is automatic and ongoing. If your site accumulates negative signals—spammy outgoing links, over-optimized anchors in comments, unfavorable content/spam ratio—the algorithms can gradually devalue your rankings without notification.
Manual action occurs when a human Quality Rater reviews your site following a report or a random audit. They discover that your comments have been filled with unmoderated spam for months. You then receive a notification in Search Console with an explicit penalty. The difference? Manual action requires correction AND a reconsideration request. The algorithm, on the other hand, silently adjusts.
Do disabled comments eliminate this risk?
Yes, but you lose a means of engagement and fresh content. High-quality comments enrich a page semantically, generate visitor time, and can even provide indexable supplementary answers. Disabling comments out of fear of spam is like closing your shop due to fear of thieves.
The optimal solution remains proactive moderation: manual or semi-automatic validation via Bayesian filters, Akismet, or custom rules. You retain the UX and SEO benefits without the risk. Sites that disable everything by default miss an opportunity to differentiate themselves from competitors who manage their communities properly.
- Manual actions: notified in Search Console, require correction + reconsideration request
- Comment spam: creates thousands of unedited outgoing links to dubious sites
- Mandatory moderation: validation before publication or regular cleaning is essential to avoid penalties
- Reputation impact: a site perceived as spam-friendly loses algorithmic trust even if the content is correct
- Deactivation as an alternative: eliminates the risk but removes a lever for engagement and semantic freshness
SEO Expert opinion
Is this policy applied consistently by Google?
On the ground, application is extremely uneven. Authority sites with thousands of spam comments have been flying under the radar for years, while smaller blogs receive manual actions for a few dozen questionable comments. The difference? Probably a mix of overall authority score, crawl frequency, and priority in the audit queue for Quality Raters.
Large media outlets enjoy a broader de facto tolerance. Their volume of legitimate content offsets the noise in comments. A new or low-authority site will be sanctioned much faster for the same level of spam. It’s frustrating but it’s the reality: Google lacks the human resources to audit all sites equitably.
What nuances should be added to this official statement?
Google talks about 'not moderating,' but the line is blurry. Is a site that moderates with a 48-hour delay but inadvertently allows some spam guilty? [To be verified]: Google never communicates a numeric threshold—10 spam comments out of 1000 legitimate ones, is that acceptable? No one knows.
Another gray area involves no-follow links. Technically, a no-follow link does not pass PageRank, so it shouldn't pollute your link profile. But Google has stated that no-follow has become a 'hint' rather than an absolute directive. A site with 10,000 no-follow outgoing links to casinos remains suspicious, even if technically 'clean.' Caution advises to remove or invalidate links in comments, regardless of their attribute.
In what cases does this rule not really apply?
Forums and UGC platforms like Reddit, Stack Overflow, or Quora largely escape this logic. Their economic model relies on user-generated content not validated in advance. Google grants them structural tolerance because they provide massive informational value despite the noise.
Your personal blog does not have this privilege. If you want open comments without prior moderation, you must invest in robust filtering tools—machine learning, IP blacklists, smart captchas—and clean daily. Without this infrastructure, you take an asymmetric risk: the SEO benefits of comments are marginal, while the risk of sanction is real.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely to avoid a sanction?
First action: complete audit of your existing comments. Export all comment URLs from your database, crawl them with Screaming Frog in 'extract outbound links' mode, and identify suspicious domains. Any link to a casino, pharmaceutical site, loan site, or suspicious .ru/.cn site must be removed or set as no-follow + rel="ugc".
Next, enable preventive moderation. WordPress offers manual validation before publication; it’s tedious but is the only zero-risk guarantee. If your volume is too high, install Akismet or an equivalent that filters 95% of automated spam. Review the remaining 5% manually each week.
What critical mistakes should absolutely be avoided?
Error number one: believing that no-follow is enough. Google has clearly stated that no-follow has become a 'hint' and not an absolute directive. A site with 10,000 no-follow outgoing links to dubious sites remains under scrutiny. Physically remove spam comments instead of just setting links to no-follow.
Error number two: ignoring old URLs. If you have 500 articles published between 2015 and 2020 with open unmoderated comments, you probably have thousands of buried spam. Google is still crawling them. Clean up retroactively starting with your best-ranked pages—those are the most important for your overall link profile.
How can I check if my site is compliant and protected?
Check Search Console > Security and Manual Actions each week. Any manual action appears there with an explicit label. If you see 'User-generated spam,' it’s too late: you are already sanctioned. You then need to clean up, document your actions in a Google Doc, and submit a detailed reconsideration request.
To preempt issues, use a monitoring tool for outbound links. Ahrefs and Majestic crawl your site and list all your outbound links. Set up a monthly alert for any newly detected outgoing domains. If you see 50 links to casinos appearing when you have not published anything, that means spam comments are slipping under your radar.
- Audit all existing comments and remove identified spam
- Enable pre-moderation or install a robust anti-spam filter (Akismet, reCAPTCHA v3)
- Review automatically approved comments weekly
- Check Search Console each week for any manual actions
- Set up an Ahrefs or Majestic alert on newly detected outgoing links
- Document your moderation policy on a dedicated page to prove your good faith in case of an audit
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les commentaires en nofollow sont-ils suffisants pour éviter une sanction Google ?
Combien de commentaires spam faut-il pour déclencher une action manuelle ?
Peut-on recevoir une action manuelle pour des commentaires spam publiés il y a plusieurs années ?
Faut-il désactiver complètement les commentaires pour éliminer ce risque ?
Comment prouver à Google qu'on modère activement si on reçoit une action manuelle ?
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