Official statement
Other statements from this video 41 ▾
- 3:48 Does Google really automatically ignore irrelevant URL parameters?
- 3:48 Why does Google ignore certain URL parameters and how does it choose its canonical version?
- 4:34 Does Google really ignore non-essential URL parameters on your site?
- 8:48 Are errors 405 and soft 404 truly handled the same way by Google?
- 8:48 Do soft 404s really trigger deindexing without a penalty?
- 10:08 Should you really prefer a soft 404 over a 405 error for removed Flash content?
- 17:06 Does submitting multiple Google reconsideration requests really speed up the review of your site?
- 18:07 Do manual actions for unnatural outbound links really affect a site's ranking?
- 18:08 Do penalties on outbound links really impact your site's ranking?
- 18:08 Should you really set all your outbound links to nofollow to protect your SEO?
- 22:23 Does Google always show your images in search results?
- 22:23 How does Google decide which images to display in search results?
- 23:58 How long does it take to recover traffic after a 301 redirect bug?
- 23:58 Can temporary technical bugs really sink your Google ranking for good?
- 24:04 Can a bug restoring your old URLs kill your SEO?
- 24:08 Why does Google aggressively recrawl your site after a migration?
- 27:47 Should you index a new URL before redirecting an old one in a 301?
- 28:18 Is it really necessary to wait for indexing before redirecting a URL in 301?
- 34:02 Why does the mobile-friendly test produce conflicting results on the same page?
- 37:14 Why should WebPageTest be your go-to tool for web performance diagnostics?
- 37:54 Are H1 titles really essential for ranking your pages?
- 38:06 Are H1 and H2 tags really important for Google ranking?
- 39:58 Is it true that structured data makes a difference based on whether it's implemented with a plugin or manually?
- 39:58 Should you manually code your structured data or opt for a WordPress plugin?
- 41:04 Should you really be worried about a 503 error on your site for a few hours?
- 41:04 Can a 503 error truly harm your site's SEO?
- 43:15 Why are your FAQ rich snippets disappearing despite technically valid markup?
- 43:15 Why are your rich results disappearing from regular SERPs while they technically work?
- 43:15 Why do your rich snippets vanish even when your markup is technically correct?
- 47:02 Why does Search Console show indexed URLs that are missing from the sitemap?
- 48:04 Should you really modify the lastmod of the sitemap to speed up recrawling after fixing missing tags?
- 48:04 Should you modify the lastmod date in the sitemap after simply correcting a meta title or description?
- 50:43 Is it normal for the Rich Results report in Search Console to remain empty despite valid markup?
- 50:43 Why is Google showing fewer of your FAQs as rich results?
- 50:43 Is it true that your validated FAQ markup might be invisible in Search Console?
- 51:17 Why is Google showing fewer FAQs in rich results now?
- 54:21 Why does Google choose a canonical URL in the wrong language for your multilingual content?
- 54:21 Does Googlebot really ignore your multilingual site's accept-language header?
- 54:21 Can Google really tell the difference between your multilingual pages, or is it at risk of mistakenly canonicalizing them?
- 57:01 Is Google really tolerant of hreflang errors that mismatch language and content?
- 57:14 Does Googlebot really send an accept-language header during crawling?
Google claims that setting all outbound links to nofollow does not degrade a site's relevance, but this practice remains unnecessary. The algorithm values natural and contextual links, not PageRank defensive strategies. In practical terms, coherent and editorial external linking remains the healthiest approach for both user experience and positioning.
What you need to understand
Why do some sites set all their links to nofollow?
This practice stems from a misinterpreted understanding of the PageRank concept. The idea? Limit the SEO juice leakage to third-party sites to concentrate all authority on their own internal pages.
This approach was marginally defensible between 2005 and 2010 when PageRank sculpting still somewhat worked. But since Google changed how it handles nofollow (and especially since the introduction of sponsored and ugc attributes), this defensive strategy no longer makes any technical sense.
What exactly does Google say about this practice?
Mueller is clear: setting all outbound links to nofollow does not lower the site's relevance. In other words, Google does not directly penalize you for this obsession with control.
But — and this is where it gets tricky — he specifies that it is unnecessary and counterproductive compared to a strategy of natural links. In clear terms: you gain nothing from this paranoia, and you lose the benefits of a contextual linking ecosystem.
What constitutes a 'natural' outbound link according to Google?
A natural outbound link is an editorial link placed because it adds value to the reader. It cites a source, refers to a study, or complements an argument.
Google measures the thematic consistency between your content and the sites you cite. A site that never cites anyone or that systematically nofollow all its editorial references sends an artificial signal. This is not a reason for penalty, but it is a pattern that dilutes the semantic strength of the content.
- Systematic nofollow does not protect your PageRank — this logic has been obsolete since 2009.
- Contextual outbound links enhance the thematic relevance of your pages in Google's eyes.
- A site that cites authoritative sources gains credibility — it's an indirect E-E-A-T signal.
- Nofollow remains relevant for sponsored links, UGC, or risky areas (unmoderated comments).
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Yes, and it's actually one of the few statements from Mueller that perfectly aligns with empirical tests. Sites that intelligently cite authoritative sources (studies, institutions, recognized media) perform better than those that remain locked in 100% internal or nofollow linking.
It's regularly observed that well-ranked pages in YMYL niches abundantly cite external sources in dofollow. This isn't a coincidence: Google interprets these links as a marker of editorial rigor.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
First point: Mueller speaks of systematic nofollow, not strategic nofollow. A link to a direct competitor, a low-quality site, or a business partner sometimes needs to be nofollowed. This is not paranoia, it's hygiene.
Second nuance: on sites with high UGC volume (forums, comments, product pages with reviews), default nofollow remains a legitimate safety measure. Google explicitly recommends it via the ugc attribute.
Third point — and this is where we lack concrete data [To be verified]: the actual impact of coherent external linking on ranking. Google does not publish any numerical metrics. We know it doesn't harm, we assume it helps, but the extent of this effect remains unclear.
When does this rule not apply?
On a pure affiliate site, where 80% of outbound links point to merchants, massive nofollow (or better yet, rel="sponsored") is mandatory to avoid being classified as a link scheme. Here, we're no longer talking about editorial strategy, but compliance with guidelines.
Another borderline case: content aggregators or comparison sites. A site that lists 200 outbound links per page to direct competitors must manage its linking surgically, often with a dofollow/nofollow mix based on editorial or contractual criteria.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do with the outbound links on your site?
Audit your current outbound link profile. Identify links that provide real editorial value (sources, studies, tools, additional information) and switch them to dofollow if they aren’t already.
For commercial links, affiliations, or sponsored content, apply rel="sponsored". For UGC areas (comments, forums), use rel="ugc". These attributes are more precise than the generic nofollow and allow Google to better qualify your linking.
What mistakes should be avoided in your external linking strategy?
Don’t fall into the extreme opposite: spamming outbound links without thematic coherence to "appear natural". Google detects artificial patterns in both directions. An outbound link should serve the reader, not your SEO checklist.
Avoid also nofollowing your citations of authoritative sources (institutions, academic studies, recognized media). It’s counterproductive: you disrupt an E-E-A-T signal for an imaginary PageRank benefit.
How can I ensure my site conforms to Google's recommendations?
Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or Sitebulb and export all external outbound links. Filter the nofollow ones and ask yourself: "Does this link really deserve a nofollow, or is it just paranoia?"
Also, check the density of outbound links per page. A 2000-word page without a single external link is suspicious. A page with 50 outbound links is also suspicious. The balance typically lies between 3 and 10 contextual links per long-format article.
- Switch to dofollow the editorial citations to authoritative and relevant sources
- Apply rel="sponsored" on all commercial links and affiliations
- Use rel="ugc" on user-generated content
- Regularly audit the dofollow/nofollow ratio to avoid artificial patterns
- Check the thematic coherence between your content and the sites you cite
- Document your external linking policy in your editorial guidelines
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le nofollow sur les liens sortants préserve-t-il mon PageRank interne ?
Dois-je nofollow mes liens vers des concurrents directs ?
Combien de liens sortants dofollow par page est considéré comme naturel ?
Les attributs sponsored et ugc remplacent-ils le nofollow ?
Un site sans aucun lien sortant peut-il bien ranker ?
🎥 From the same video 41
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 11/08/2020
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