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Official statement

You can have as many pages in redirect as you want. Millions of redirects are acceptable if that's what you need. It is not necessary to redirect every 404 error.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 29/12/2022 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. Faut-il changer de domaine lors d'une réduction de catalogue ou conserver l'existant ?
  2. Les backlinks vers une page 404 sont-ils définitivement perdus ou récupérables ?
  3. Faut-il vraiment ignorer les erreurs 404 dans Google Search Console ?
  4. Faut-il vraiment ajouter les pages paginées dans le sitemap XML ?
  5. Google crawle-t-il vraiment les liens dans les menus déroulants au survol ?
  6. Combien de redirections peut-on vraiment mettre sur un site sans pénalité SEO ?
  7. Faut-il privilégier une personne ou une organisation comme auteur d'un article pour le SEO ?
  8. Faut-il vraiment aligner URL, title et H1 pour ranker en SEO ?
  9. Bloquer une page de redirection par robots.txt peut-il vraiment empêcher le passage du PageRank ?
  10. Les tirets multiples dans un nom de domaine pénalisent-ils votre SEO ?
  11. Faut-il publier du contenu tous les jours pour bien ranker sur Google ?
  12. Faut-il vraiment abandonner le texte dans les images pour le SEO ?
  13. Désindexer des URLs : Google limite-t-il vraiment les options à deux méthodes ?
  14. Les Core Web Vitals écrasent-ils vraiment la pertinence dans le classement Google ?
📅
Official statement from (3 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that there is no limit to the number of 301 redirects on a website. Millions of redirects are perfectly acceptable if your architecture requires it. You are not obligated to systematically redirect every 404 error.

What you need to understand

Why this clarification on 301 redirects now?

The SEO community has maintained for years a stubborn belief: too many redirects would harm crawling, dilute PageRank, or cause penalties. Mueller's statement crushes this myth head-on.

Google clarifies that a website can technically handle millions of redirects without any problem for its algorithms. What matters is the relevance of these redirects in your architecture — not their absolute number.

Should you redirect all 404 errors?

No. In fact, the opposite is recommended.

A 404 error on a URL with no traffic history, no backlinks, no real SEO value has no reason to be redirected. Creating « just in case » redirects dilutes analysis and complicates maintenance for nothing.

What happens technically with a 301 redirect?

A 301 redirect transfers nearly all of the PageRank from the source URL to the destination URL. Google follows these redirects during crawling and updates its index accordingly.

The delay in consolidating signals (backlinks, authority) depends on crawl frequency, not on the total number of redirects on the site.

  • No quantitative limit on the number of 301 redirects on a website
  • 404 is a normal and useful HTTP code — do not systematically redirect
  • PageRank transfer via 301 remains effective regardless of scale
  • The relevance of the redirect matters more than its existence

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, generally. E-commerce sites with hundreds of thousands of redirects (discontinued products, multiple redesigns) do not show visibility loss linked to the volume of 301s.

However — and Mueller remains silent on this — redirect chains (A → B → C) remain problematic. PageRank dilutes with each hop, crawl time increases, and Google may abandon midway. [To verify]: the exact number of hops tolerated before abandonment varies by source (between 3 and 5).

What are the real problems with massive redirects?

Volume is not the issue. It is quality and relevance that matter.

Redirecting 10,000 old product pages to the homepage? Disastrous for UX and useless for SEO. Redirecting 10,000 old URLs to their perfectly relevant current equivalents? No problem at all.

Warning: Redirects consume server time. A site with millions of poorly configured 301s (uncached redirects, multiple chains) can see its technical performance degrade even if Google continues crawling normally.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

Mueller talks about classic permanent redirects, not edge cases or manifest abuse.

JavaScript redirects on the client side, meta-refresh, repeated 302 temporary redirects, or cloaking systems disguised as redirects: none of that falls under the scope of this reassuring statement.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do after this statement?

Stop panicking about the raw number of redirects. Focus on their relevance and effectiveness.

During a redesign or migration, do not artificially limit yourself. If you have 50,000 URLs to intelligently redirect, do it. What matters: that each redirect points to the most relevant destination possible.

What mistakes to avoid with 301 redirects?

Do not default to redirecting all 404s to the homepage. This is a bad practice that degrades user experience and sends confused signals to Google.

Avoid redirect chains. Regularly audit your redirect file to detect and fix chains A → B → C. Redirect directly A → C.

  • Audit redirect chains and resolve them to direct links
  • Only create a redirect if the source URL has identifiable SEO value (traffic, backlinks, history)
  • Document massive redirects during redesigns to facilitate future maintenance
  • Monitor server response times if redirect volume exceeds tens of thousands
  • Prioritize caching redirect rules on the server side (nginx, Apache)
  • Never massively redirect to the homepage — prioritize category pages or thematic equivalents
Google lifts an imaginary limit: redirect volume is not a penalizing factor. Focus your efforts on architectural consistency, resolving chains, and relevance of destinations. If your technical infrastructure contains millions of historical URLs to manage, these operations can quickly become complex. A specialized SEO agency can support you in auditing, planning, and executing a clean, documented, and efficient redirect plan.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de redirections 301 peut-on avoir sans risque ?
Il n'y a pas de limite chiffrée. Google accepte des millions de redirections si elles sont justifiées par l'architecture du site. Le critère n'est pas quantitatif mais qualitatif : pertinence et absence de chaînes.
Faut-il rediriger toutes les pages en 404 ?
Non. Seules les URLs avec un historique de trafic, des backlinks ou une valeur SEO méritent une redirection. Une 404 sur une URL sans valeur est un signal normal et sain.
Les redirections 301 font-elles perdre du PageRank ?
Non. Une redirection 301 unique transfère la quasi-totalité du PageRank. En revanche, les chaînes de redirections (A → B → C) diluent progressivement l'autorité transmise.
Combien de temps Google met-il à prendre en compte une redirection 301 ?
Cela dépend de la fréquence de recrawl de l'URL concernée. Pour une page crawlée quotidiennement, quelques jours suffisent. Pour une URL rarement visitée, plusieurs semaines peuvent être nécessaires.
Les redirections 301 ralentissent-elles le crawl de Google ?
Pas directement. Le volume de redirections n'affecte pas le crawl budget global. En revanche, des chaînes de redirections ou des configurations serveur inefficaces peuvent ralentir les temps de réponse et donc indirectement le crawl.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Pagination & Structure Redirects

🎥 From the same video 14

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 29/12/2022

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