Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:05 L'alignement des signaux canonical suffit-il vraiment à garantir l'indexation de vos URLs préférées ?
- 4:08 Liens absolus ou relatifs : lequel choisir pour optimiser votre SEO ?
- 8:18 Le duplicate content est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
- 12:02 Corriger l'orthographe et la grammaire améliore-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 14:13 Faut-il vraiment garder vos redirections 301 pour toujours ?
- 14:28 Les rich snippets mal utilisés peuvent-ils déclencher une pénalité manuelle ?
- 17:17 Le duplicate content pénalise-t-il vraiment votre classement SEO ?
- 39:45 Pourquoi robots.txt ne désindexe-t-il pas vos pages et quelle méthode choisir pour retirer des URL de l'index ?
- 45:47 Les redirections JavaScript et Meta Refresh sont-elles vraiment un problème pour le crawl de Google ?
Google explicitly advises against using the nofollow attribute on internal links, including those to login pages or terms of service. The search engine claims that it can manage these navigation elements naturally without intervention. In practice, this means that sculpting internal PageRank through nofollow has become unnecessary, even counterproductive for distributing authority across your site.
What you need to understand
Why is Google changing its stance on internal nofollow?
The nofollow attribute has long been used to control the flow of internal PageRank, a technique known as PageRank sculpting. SEOs would block certain links (footer, login, cart) to concentrate authority on strategic pages.
For several years now, Google has gradually modified how it treats nofollow: first as a strict directive, then as an indicative signal. Mueller's statement marks this evolution: the search engine is now capable of automatically detecting secondary navigation areas and adjusting their weight without manual intervention.
This position also reflects a desire for simplification. Google wants crawlers to explore sites naturally without artificial obstacles complicating link structure analysis.
What types of internal links are affected by this recommendation?
Mueller explicitly mentions login pages and terms of service, but the principle extends to all functional navigation: legal mentions, privacy policy, repetitive footer links, filtering facets in e-commerce.
The underlying idea: these links are part of the normal architecture of a site. Google can identify them as structural elements rather than strong editorial recommendations. Blocking their exploration does not provide any measurable advantage.
Some SEOs still fear “wasting” crawl budget or PageRank on less strategic pages. This concern was justified a decade ago, but it is no longer the case with the current contextual algorithms that automatically weigh the importance of links.
Is internal nofollow still relevant in some cases?
Google says “no need,” but that does not mean “forbidden.” In very specific configurations — sites with millions of pages, complex architectures with massive duplicated content, or at-risk user-generated content areas — nofollow may still serve as a precaution signal.
The important nuance: no longer rely on nofollow to optimize authority distribution. If you use it, it should be for extreme crawl management or security reasons (unmoderated user-generated links), not for sculpting PageRank.
- PageRank sculpting via nofollow is obsolete: Google automatically adjusts the weight of internal links depending on their context.
- Standard navigation links (footer, login, terms of service) do not need nofollow attributes to be correctly interpreted.
- Simplifying link structure improves crawler understanding of the site and reduces exploration friction.
- Possible exceptions: very large sites or at-risk UGC areas, but never for PageRank optimization.
- Prioritize natural linking: focus on the semantic relevance of links rather than technical attributes.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this recommendation align with real-world observations?
Yes, largely. Tests removing internal nofollow attributes on mid-market sites (50k-500k pages) have shown no loss in ranking or crawl efficiency for about three years. Some sites have even gained in indexing depth once barriers were lifted.
However, [To be verified] on extreme architectures like marketplaces with millions of dynamic facets or external content aggregation sites. There is a lack of public data to confirm that Google manages these edge cases without any guidance.
What is observed: Google now places more importance on the semantic consistency of linking than on the raw mechanics of PageRank transmission. A relevant contextual link in the body of text is infinitely more valuable than a footer link, with or without nofollow.
What are the consequences of retaining unnecessary internal nofollow?
In concrete terms? Probably no direct penalty. Google simply ignores the attribute or treats it as a weak signal among others. The real risk is the missed opportunity: you complicate your code for no reason and miss potential gains in natural authority distribution.
Some sites keep historical nofollow attributes out of fear or technical inertia. The issue is not so much the nofollow itself but the symptom: a stagnant linking strategy that does not adapt to algorithm changes. If you spend time managing nofollow, you are not spending it optimizing the contextual relevance of links.
Is Google's position definitive or will it evolve further?
Google took nearly fifteen years to transition from “nofollow = strict directive” to “internal nofollow = unnecessary.” This evolution reflects the improvement of contextual understanding systems and automatic weighting of links. It is unlikely they will reverse course.
However, [To be verified] how this position will relate to future developments related to AI and conversational agents. If Google moves toward less link-centric ranking modes, the question of internal nofollow might become completely marginal in a few years.
In the meantime, the pragmatic rule is: simplify your linking, remove unjustified internal nofollow attributes, and focus on creating relevant contextual links. This is what current algorithms reward.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you quickly audit internal nofollow attributes on your site?
Use Screaming Frog or a similar tool to extract all internal links with the nofollow attribute. Export the list and categorize by type: navigation (header/footer), functional (login, cart), content (editorial links).
Start by focusing on standard navigation links: terms of service, legal mentions, login, help. These are the priority candidates for nofollow removal. Then check repetitive footer links and global template elements.
For e-commerce sites, examine the filtering facets and pagination systems. If you implemented nofollow due to crawl budget concerns, first check if those pages are genuinely problematic (duplication, low value) or if it’s an unfounded fear. In most cases, allowing Google to explore naturally yields better results.
What mistakes should you avoid when removing internal nofollow?
Do not remove all nofollow attributes at once without prior analysis. Some may have been applied for good reasons (UGC links, testing areas, temporary content). Document the initial reason for each nofollow before making a decision.
Avoid confusion with robots.txt and meta noindex. Removing a nofollow does not mean that the target page will be crawled or indexed if it is blocked by other mechanisms. Check the overall consistency of your crawl strategy.
A frequent mistake: replacing nofollow with complex JavaScript solutions to “hide” links from bots. This is counterproductive and potentially risky. If a link needs to be in your HTML for UX, make it accessible to crawlers without tricks.
What internal linking strategy should you adopt after removing nofollow?
Focus on semantic relevance: each internal link should provide genuine navigation or contextual value for the user. Prefer links within the body of the content, with natural descriptive anchors.
Reorganize your architecture if necessary to reduce click depth to strategic pages. A good natural linking always beats an artificial linking sculpted by technical attributes. Measure the impact with crawl budget data in Search Console and ranking metrics on your target pages.
- Audit all internal links with nofollow using an SEO crawler
- Remove nofollow on standard navigation (terms of service, login, basic footer)
- Document historical reasons before mass removal
- Verify consistency with robots.txt and meta robots
- Prioritize relevant contextual links within the content
- Monitor changes in crawl budget and indexing post-modification
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le nofollow interne pénalise-t-il directement le référencement ?
Faut-il garder nofollow sur les liens de pagination en e-commerce ?
Le nofollow sur liens sortants reste-t-il recommandé ?
Comment mesurer l'impact de la suppression des nofollow internes ?
Les sites de très grande taille doivent-ils aussi supprimer tous les nofollow internes ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 51 min · published on 10/03/2016
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