Official statement
Other statements from this video 2 ▾
Google claims that a reconsideration request should receive a response within a maximum of two weeks. After this period, it is recommended to post in help forums to follow up. Certain periods of launching new features may extend this processing time, but this justification remains vague and difficult to verify from a practitioner’s perspective.
What you need to understand
What exactly is a reconsideration request?
A reconsideration request occurs when a site has been impacted by a manual action from Google. It is the official procedure to request the lifting of the penalty after correcting the identified issues.
This mechanism exclusively concerns manual actions, not traffic drops related to algorithm updates. A site affected by Helpful Content or Core Update cannot submit a reconsideration, as there is no manual penalty to lift.
Why does Google set a two-week deadline?
The two-week deadline serves as a benchmark to distinguish between normal processing and abnormal blockage. Google processes thousands of requests each month, and this threshold helps identify cases that require follow-up.
However, this deadline remains an indication, not a contractual guarantee. Google teams handle these requests manually, and the workload varies over time. The absence of a response after 14 days does not automatically imply a refusal.
How should we interpret the 'exceptional circumstances' mentioned?
Google refers to launches of new features as a possible cause for delays. This wording remains deliberately vague and difficult to verify for an SEO practitioner.
In practice, these delays may also arise from complex cases requiring multiple reviews, or from peak times such as after a massive spam wave. Google never publicly details these critical phases, making planning challenging.
- Standard time frame: two weeks maximum for an initial response
- Recommended action: post in the Google Search Central help forum after 14 days with no news
- Exceptional circumstances: product launches, peak times (not publicly documented)
- Scope: only manual actions, not algorithmic drops
- No guarantee: the timeframe is indicative, not contractual
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
The two-week deadline generally aligns with the experiences of SEO practitioners. Most requests do receive a response within this timeframe, whether positive or negative.
However, cases exceeding 3 to 4 weeks are still common, particularly with complex files involving sophisticated spam or networks of sites. Google never communicates about these exceptions, leaving webmasters in uncertainty. [To be verified]: the actual impact of product launches on the reconsideration processing queue has never been publicly quantified.
Is the advice to post in forums really effective?
Posting in the Google Search Central forum sometimes allows you to receive a response from a Google Search Advocate or a Top Contributor who can escalate the case internally. It is not a guarantee, but it does increase visibility.
However, be cautious: some practitioners have found that multiplying follow-ups (forum + Twitter + support) can instead slow down processing. Google seems to prioritize cases that follow the unique official channel. Transparency remains limited regarding the actual prioritization criteria.
What are the ambiguities in this communication?
Google never specifies which features may affect reconsideration timelines. This generic wording allows for justifying any delay without needing to provide further justification.
Additionally, no SLA (Service Level Agreement) is communicated for urgent cases, such as an e-commerce site penalized during clearance sales. The process remains entirely opaque from the practitioner's perspective, with no opportunity for prioritization or formal escalation.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do after submitting a request?
Once you’ve submitted the request via Search Console, note the submission date and set a reminder for J+14. Do not follow up before this date, as you would only waste your time and potentially slow down the processing.
Use this waiting period to document all corrections made with screenshots and data exports. If Google denies the request, you need to be able to justify each action taken.
How can you maximize your chances of acceptance on the first attempt?
The quality of the initial request makes all the difference. Be factual, precise, and clearly acknowledge the mistakes made without trying to downplay them. Google dislikes generic requests like 'I cleaned everything up'.
List each type of issue identified, the concerned URLs (with examples), and the corrective actions taken. A comparative table before/after with concrete metrics (number of links removed, content rewritten, redirects deactivated) significantly strengthens the credibility of your file.
What to do if the deadline exceeds two weeks without a response?
Post a detailed question in the Google Search Central forum specifying the submission date, the type of manual action, and a summary of the corrections made. Avoid emotional or accusatory messages.
If, after 4 weeks, you still have no response, try contacting Twitter while mentioning the official Google Search accounts. Stay professional and factual. In some complex cases requiring deep expertise in Google penalties and careful management of the reconsideration process, consulting with a specialized SEO agency may prove wise to maximize your chances of quick lifting and avoid mistakes that would unnecessarily prolong the penalty.
- Note the submission date and schedule a reminder for J+14
- Document all corrections with tangible evidence (screenshots, CSV exports)
- Draft a factual request with clear acknowledgment of mistakes
- Wait 14 days before any follow-up to avoid slowing down processing
- Post in the official forum after 2 weeks without a response
- Maintain a professional tone in all follow-up communications
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on soumettre plusieurs demandes de reconsidération simultanément ?
Un refus de reconsidération est-il définitif ?
Le délai de deux semaines court-il à partir de la soumission ou de la validation technique de la demande ?
Faut-il attendre la réponse à une reconsidération avant de continuer les correctifs ?
Les Product Expert du forum peuvent-ils accélérer le traitement d'une demande ?
🎥 From the same video 2
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 19/11/2012
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.