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Official statement

The idea that new sites are artificially limited (sandbox) is a myth. Google does not use a sandbox and does not affect the initial ranking for new pages.
9:30
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:04 💬 EN 📅 20/07/2018 ✂ 17 statements
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Other statements from this video 16
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  2. 1:45 Les noms de domaine similaires peuvent-ils vraiment nuire à votre SEO ?
  3. 3:17 Faut-il corriger toutes les erreurs 404 et 500 remontées dans Search Console ?
  4. 4:49 Google conserve-t-il vraiment l'indexation d'une page en erreur 500 ou 404 ?
  5. 5:52 Les balises sémantiques H2/H3 influencent-elles vraiment le classement Google ?
  6. 8:27 Une nouvelle page peut-elle ranker immédiatement après indexation ?
  7. 10:18 RankBrain : comment l'IA de Google transforme-t-elle réellement le traitement des requêtes SEO ?
  8. 11:57 Faut-il vraiment optimiser la vitesse de chargement pour le SEO ou est-ce un mythe ?
  9. 13:10 Comment réduire le temps de transfert de signal lors d'une migration de site ?
  10. 20:06 Faut-il vraiment utiliser noindex en JavaScript sur les pages en rupture de stock ?
  11. 21:46 Les paramètres UTM nuisent-ils vraiment à votre budget crawl ?
  12. 22:50 Faut-il re-télécharger son fichier de désaveu après une migration de domaine ?
  13. 24:54 Faut-il vraiment désavouer tous les liens spam qui pointent vers votre site ?
  14. 27:10 Pourquoi les outils de test live de Google ne reflètent-ils pas toujours l'indexation réelle ?
  15. 31:58 Le contenu généré automatiquement passe-t-il vraiment le filtre Google ?
  16. 55:38 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter des pages « Crawled but not Indexed » ?
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Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims it does not use a sandbox that artificially limits the ranking of new sites. According to John Mueller, there is no initial filter that prevents new pages from ranking. For an SEO, this means that the challenges a young site faces come from traditional factors: lack of authority, backlinks, and content—not from a programmed temporary suppression.

What you need to understand

What is the origin of the Google sandbox myth?

The concept of Google sandbox has been circulating since the early 2000s when some SEOs noticed that their new sites struggled to rank for several months, even with quality content. The hypothesis of a time-based filter spread: Google would place new domains in a "sandbox" for 3 to 6 months before allowing them to perform well.

This theory has persisted because it aligns with frequent field experiences. A new site often takes months to emerge in the SERPs, even with flawless on-page optimizations. But correlation is not causation. The observations do not prove the existence of a dedicated algorithmic filter.

What does Google actually say about this sandbox filter?

John Mueller is categorical: there is no sandbox that artificially limits new sites. Google does not apply any time penalty to the ranking of newly indexed pages. A new domain can theoretically rank as soon as it is crawled if all relevance and authority signals are in place.

This official position is not new. Google has consistently reaffirmed it for years in the face of the persistent myth. The message is clear: if your young site is not ranking, look towards SEO fundamentals, not a non-existent programmed suppression.

Why do new sites struggle to rank, then?

If the sandbox does not exist, how can we explain the recurring difficulties faced by new sites? The answer lies in the natural weakness of authority signals. A blank domain has no crawling history, no established backlinks, and no accumulated reputation. Google has no reason to trust it immediately.

Thus, a new site's ranking depends on its ability to quickly build trust signals: quality link building, demonstrated expert content, positive engagement signals. This process takes time, but it is not an artificial filter that slows it down, it is the gradual construction of an algorithmic reputation.

  • No time filter artificially limiting new sites
  • The time to ramp up is explained by the absence of authority signals
  • Backlinks, expert content, and user signals remain the priority levers
  • A new domain can rank quickly if the signals are strong enough from the start
  • The persistence of the myth relies on a confusion between correlation and causation

SEO Expert opinion

Do field observations really contradict this statement?

Mueller's statement is technically accurate, but it does not account for the practical reality of ranking for new sites. In practice, there is consistently a latency phase before a new domain breaks through in competitive SERPs. Is this a sandbox? No. Is it an undetectable effect of a sandbox from a practitioner's perspective? Yes.

The nuance is subtle but crucial. Google does not artificially limit a new site, but its algorithm heavily favors established domains through hundreds of cumulative signals. The net result is the same: a young site struggles for months, even with a solid SEO strategy. Saying "the sandbox does not exist" does not help a practitioner facing this operational reality.

What algorithmic signals create this de facto sandbox effect?

Several mechanisms from Google produce an effect similar to a time filter without being one. TrustRank and the legacy of PageRank favor sites with a history of backlinks. The freshness algorithms paradoxically favor established domains that publish regularly rather than new entrants. Anti-spam systems are more vigilant with recent domains.

We can also add the progressive crawl speed. A new site is assigned a minimal crawl budget that Google increases over time along with positive signals. Mechanically, this slows down the discovery and indexing of content. It is not a sandbox, but the practical result is a slow and frustrating ramp-up. [To be verified]: Google does not publish any specific metrics on the initial allocation of crawl budget by domain type.

In which cases can a new site rank quickly anyway?

There are scenarios where a new domain can break through quickly. A site created by a known entity with strong brand authority (launching a new service by an established brand) benefits from an authority transfer. A domain that quickly acquires high-authority backlinks (press coverage, institutional mentions) bypasses the latency phase.

Low competition niches also allow for quick positioning even without a history. If the target query has few qualified results, Google will quickly rank a relevant new site. Finally, an ultra-targeted content strategy on long-tail queries can generate organic traffic within the first weeks, even if generic queries remain inaccessible.

Warning: Some SEOs use "accelerated launch" techniques (aged domains, launch PBNs, early massive backlinks) to bypass the latency phase. These practices carry high risks of manual or algorithmic penalties if the signals seem artificial.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you optimize the launch of a new site to rank faster?

Since the issue is not a sandbox but the absence of authority signals, the strategy is to build these signals as quickly as possible. Even before the public launch, prepare a targeted link building campaign: identify accessible backlink sources in your niche, prepare linkable content (studies, resources, tools), and start your outreach as soon as the site goes live.

On the technical side, ensure that Googlebot can crawl and index effectively from day one. A poorly configured site (blocking robots.txt, crawl issues, terrible speed) wastes the already limited initial crawl budget. Use Search Console to monitor indexing and immediately identify any potential blockages.

Should you prioritize certain types of content at launch?

Focus on content that immediately demonstrates your expertise rather than publishing mass amounts of mediocre content. Google values E-E-A-T signals from the first visits: identified authors, cited sources, depth of analysis. Three reference articles are better than twenty superficial pages.

Prioritize targeting long-tail low-competition queries where you can rank quickly and accumulate positive engagement signals (time on site, pages viewed, bounce rates). These initial successes gradually build your thematic authority and facilitate climbing for more competitive queries later.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid with a new domain?

Do not attempt to force the pace with artificial massive backlinks. Google’s anti-spam filters are particularly sensitive on new domains. A suspicious link profile right from the launch can earn you a Penguin penalty that can take months to recover from. Always prioritize quality over quantity.

Also, avoid publishing content in bulk too quickly. A site that goes from 0 to 200 pages in a week sends a strange signal to Google. It’s better to maintain a regular and sustainable publishing pace that simulates natural organic growth. Finally, do not neglect technical fundamentals: a slow or poorly structured site wastes all your content and link-building efforts.

  • Prepare a quality link building campaign before launch
  • Optimize crawlability and technical indexing from day one
  • Publish expert content that immediately demonstrates E-E-A-T
  • Target accessible long-tail queries to generate early signals
  • Avoid any artificial signals (mass backlinks, excessive publishing)
  • Monitor Search Console daily for the first weeks
Launching the SEO for a new site requires precise orchestration of numerous technical, editorial, and link-building levers. These optimizations are often complex to coordinate alone, especially if you are simultaneously managing product development and customer acquisition. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate your ramp-up while avoiding costly mistakes and capitalizing on proven rapid-launch strategies.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il généralement à un nouveau site pour commencer à ranker ?
Il n'y a pas de délai fixe puisqu'il n'existe pas de sandbox temporel. Certains sites rankent dès les premières semaines sur des requêtes peu compétitives, d'autres mettent 6 à 12 mois sur des marchés saturés. Tout dépend de votre capacité à construire rapidement des signaux d'autorité et de pertinence.
Un aged domain permet-il de contourner la phase de latence d'un nouveau site ?
Un domaine expiré avec historique propre et backlinks conservés peut effectivement démarrer avec un avantage en autorité. Mais Google détecte les changements thématiques radicaux et peut ignorer l'historique si le nouveau contenu n'a rien à voir avec l'ancien. C'est une stratégie risquée qui nécessite une expertise approfondie.
Faut-il attendre avant de lancer une campagne netlinking sur un site neuf ?
Non, vous pouvez et devriez commencer à construire des backlinks dès le lancement. Ce qui compte est la qualité et la naturalité du profil de liens, pas le timing. Des liens éditoriaux pertinents dès les premières semaines accélèrent votre montée en puissance sans risque.
Google traite-t-il différemment les sous-domaines ou nouvelles sections d'un site établi ?
Une nouvelle section sur un domaine établi bénéficie de l'autorité existante du domaine principal, ce qui facilite grandement son indexation et son positionnement. C'est l'un des avantages majeurs de développer sur un domaine existant plutôt que de lancer un nouveau site.
Les signaux sociaux peuvent-ils compenser le manque d'autorité d'un site neuf ?
Les signaux sociaux (partages, mentions) peuvent générer du trafic et indirectement des backlinks, mais ils ne sont pas un facteur de ranking direct selon Google. Ils peuvent accélérer la découverte de votre contenu mais ne remplacent pas la construction d'une autorité via backlinks et signaux on-site.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO

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