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Official statement

Google has announced new ranking signals related to user experience (Core Web Vitals), but they won't launch until the end of 2020. Webmasters must first focus on their current priorities, particularly those related to the COVID context, before addressing these new criteria.
2:22
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h14 💬 EN 📅 04/06/2020 ✂ 44 statements
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Other statements from this video 43
  1. 2:22 What should you do if your site lost traffic after a Core Update without making any mistakes?
  2. 3:50 Does a ranking drop after a Core Update really indicate an issue with your site?
  3. 3:50 Should You Really Wait Before Optimizing Core Web Vitals?
  4. 3:50 Why is Google delaying the complete transition to the Mobile-First Index?
  5. 7:07 Can Google really delay Mobile-First Indexing indefinitely?
  6. 11:00 Why doesn't Google canonicalize URLs with fragments in sitelinks and rich results?
  7. 11:00 Do URLs with fragments (#) in Search Console mean you need to rethink your tracking and analysis strategy?
  8. 14:34 Why do the numbers from Analytics, Search Console, and My Business never match?
  9. 14:35 Why do your Google metrics never align between Search Console, Analytics, and Business Profile?
  10. 16:37 How are FAQ clicks really counted in Search Console?
  11. 18:44 Are mobile and desktop accordions really neutral for SEO?
  12. 18:44 Is it true that mobile accordion hidden content is indexed as visible content?
  13. 29:45 Does the rel=canonical via HTTP header really still work?
  14. 30:09 Does the HTTP header rel=canonical really work to manage duplicate content?
  15. 31:00 Why does Search Console still show 'PC Googlebot' on recent sites when Mobile-First Index is supposed to be the standard?
  16. 31:02 Is it true that all sites indexed after July 2019 default to Mobile-First Indexing?
  17. 33:28 Why does Google emphasize textual context in Search Console feedback?
  18. 33:31 Are Search Console tools really enough to solve your indexing problems?
  19. 33:59 Why are your pages still not indexed after 60 days in Search Console?
  20. 37:24 What happens when Google occasionally indexes HTTP instead of HTTPS even after an SSL migration?
  21. 37:53 Is it really necessary to combine both 301 redirections AND canonical tags for an HTTPS migration?
  22. 39:16 What really causes your sitemap to fail in Search Console and how can you effectively resolve the issue?
  23. 41:29 Is your brand disappearing from the SERPs for no apparent reason: can Google feedback really fix it?
  24. 44:07 Should you choose a subdomain or a new domain for launching a service?
  25. 44:34 Subdomain or New Domain: What Does Google Really Think for SEO?
  26. 44:34 Do Google penalties really transfer between domains and subdomains?
  27. 45:27 Do Google penalties really spread between domains and subdomains?
  28. 48:24 Should you really overlook PageRank when deciding between a domain and a subdomain?
  29. 48:33 Do links between root domains and subdomains really pass PageRank?
  30. 49:58 Should you really be worried about duplicate content from scraping?
  31. 50:14 Can you relaunch an old domain without being penalized for duplicate content by spammers?
  32. 50:14 Should you really report every scraping URL via the Spam Report to prompt action from Google?
  33. 57:15 Is it really necessary to report spam URL by URL to assist Google?
  34. 58:57 Why does Google refuse to show your FAQs in rich results despite perfect markup?
  35. 59:54 Why doesn't Google display your FAQ rich results even with perfect markup?
  36. 65:15 Is it possible to add FAQs to your pages just to secure rich results in SEO?
  37. 65:45 Can you really add a FAQ just to get the rich result without risking penalties?
  38. 67:27 Should you still optimize rel=next/prev tags for pagination?
  39. 67:58 Should you really submit all paginated pages in the XML sitemap?
  40. 70:10 Should you really index all category pages to optimize your crawl budget?
  41. 70:18 Should you really stop placing category pages in noindex?
  42. 72:04 Does the number of JavaScript files really slow down Google indexing?
  43. 72:24 Does Googlebot really render all JavaScript in a single pass?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google has officially announced the introduction of Core Web Vitals as new ranking signals while delaying their rollout to give webmasters time to manage COVID-related priorities. This means that technical user experience is now a measurable ranking criterion — loading speed, interactivity, and visual stability now count. The underlying message: get ready, but don't panic or overhaul everything immediately.

What you need to understand

What Exactly Are the Core Web Vitals Announced by Google?

The Core Web Vitals represent three specific technical metrics measuring actual user experience: the Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), the First Input Delay (FID), and the Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS). The LCP measures the loading time of the main content perceived by the user — ideally under 2.5 seconds. The FID captures interactive responsiveness, meaning the delay before a click or interaction is registered — aimed for less than 100 milliseconds.

The CLS quantifies visual stability during loading, those annoying moments when a button shifts just when you click it. A score below 0.1 is recommended. Google collects this data through the Chrome User Experience Report (CrUX), based on real user Chrome navigations — these are not synthetic lab tests, but real-world conditions.

Why Did Google Choose to Delay the Rollout?

The statement explicitly mentions the COVID context as the reason for the postponement beyond the end of the calendar year. Essentially, Google acknowledges that technical teams are focused on critical business priorities — urgent e-commerce redesign, managing unpredictable traffic spikes, maintaining strained systems.

This delay is not trivial: it reveals that Google understands the complexity of optimizing these metrics for real sites, especially legacy infrastructures. Unlike simply adding a meta tag, improving the CLS on a site with 15 third-party ad scripts and a proprietary CMS can take weeks of developer work. Google is offering a reprieve, but also a warning: the signal will come, so prepare methodically.

Will These New Criteria Overpower Existing Relevance Signals?

No, and it’s crucial to understand this. Google has emphasized in various parallel communications (notably on the Search Central Blog) that Core Web Vitals are a tie-breaker, not a bulldozer. An ultra-fast site with mediocre content will not outclass a slower competitor that provides a comprehensive and relevant response to the user query.

These signals come into play when the thematic relevance is comparable between multiple results. In a highly competitive sector where 10 sites respond equally well to a query, the one with better Core Web Vitals will gain an advantage. But the golden rule remains: content comes first, technical UX differentiates. This doesn’t justify neglecting these optimizations — it repositions them within a realistic strategic hierarchy.

  • The Core Web Vitals introduce three measurable user experience metrics: LCP (loading), FID (interactivity), CLS (stability)
  • The rollout as ranking signals is postponed beyond the calendar year to allow webmasters to handle COVID-related priorities
  • These criteria function as tie-breakers between content of equivalent quality, not as a dominating criterion overpowering relevance
  • The data comes from the Chrome User Experience Report, reflecting real user experiences on Chrome, not synthetic lab tests
  • Google clearly communicates that webmasters must prioritize their current urgencies before embarking on heavy technical optimization projects

SEO Expert opinion

Is This Announcement Part of a Consistent Trend from Google?

Absolutely. For years, Google has pushed the idea that user experience is inseparable from SEO. The shift to mobile-first indexing, penalties on intrusive interstitials, the introduction of the "mobile-friendly" label in SERPs — all converge towards this philosophy. The Core Web Vitals simply represent the next iteration, with a major difference: quantifiable metrics that are public.

What changes the game is that Google provides measurement tools (PageSpeed Insights, Search Console, Lighthouse) and specific thresholds. Gone is the artistic vagueness of "make your site faster" — we now aim for a measurable LCP

Practical impact and recommendations

What Concrete Actions Can You Start Now Without Overhauling Everything?

First step: establish a quantified baseline. Use Google Search Console ("Core Web Vitals" report) to identify problematic URLs across your site, and PageSpeed Insights for a page-by-page diagnosis. These tools leverage the real CrUX data of your Chrome users — it’s what Google actually sees. Don't rely solely on local Lighthouse tests, which run in artificially ideal lab conditions that are unrepresentative.

Next, prioritize quick wins based on the Pareto principle: optimize images (using WebP format, compression, appropriate dimensions), defer loading non-critical scripts, pre-load essential resources. These actions can bring a 30-40% improvement with limited developer effort. Don't immediately embark on a complete overhaul of the technical stack — start with quick ROI levers to save time before the actual signal deployment.

What Fatal Errors Should You Avoid in This Transition?

Classic mistake: sacrificing functionality for score. Removing all third-party scripts to achieve a perfect LCP, only to find that your analytics system, conversion tools, and advertising partners no longer function — congratulations, you have a fast site that is blind and revenue-less. The goal is not a 100/100 Lighthouse score, but to achieve the "Good" thresholds of Core Web Vitals (LCP

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les Core Web Vitals remplacent-ils la pertinence du contenu comme critère de ranking principal ?
Non. Google a clairement indiqué que ces métriques fonctionnent comme signaux de départage entre contenus de qualité équivalente. Un site rapide avec un contenu médiocre ne surclassera pas un concurrent plus lent mais plus pertinent.
Les données utilisées par Google pour mesurer les Core Web Vitals proviennent-elles de tests synthétiques ?
Non, Google utilise le Chrome User Experience Report (CrUX), qui agrège des données de navigation réelles d'utilisateurs Chrome sur 28 jours glissants. Ce ne sont pas des tests Lighthouse en laboratoire mais des conditions terrain.
Un site sous CMS classique comme WordPress peut-il atteindre de bons scores Core Web Vitals ?
Oui, avec une configuration optimisée : hébergement performant, thème léger, plugins limités, optimisation d'images et mise en cache correcte. Les sites WordPress bien configurés peuvent atteindre les seuils recommandés sans refonte complète.
Faut-il viser un score de 100/100 sur PageSpeed Insights pour être bien classé ?
Non. L'objectif est d'atteindre les seuils "Good" des trois Core Web Vitals (LCP <2,5s, FID <100ms, CLS <0,1). Un score Lighthouse de 90 ou 95 est largement suffisant si ces trois métriques sont dans le vert.
Combien de temps après une optimisation technique peut-on mesurer l'impact sur les Core Web Vitals ?
Les données CrUX dans Search Console sont agrégées sur 28 jours glissants. Une optimisation déployée aujourd'hui ne sera donc pleinement visible dans les rapports qu'après environ un mois, selon le volume de trafic du site.
🏷 Related Topics
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 04/06/2020

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