Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 1:04 Google classe-t-il vraiment les contenus d'actualité différemment des autres résultats ?
- 2:07 Les mises à jour mobile de Google affectent-elles vraiment votre positionnement ?
- 4:16 Faut-il vraiment limiter ses pages à une seule balise H1 ?
- 5:13 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il les balises canonical de la version mobile ?
- 15:16 Faut-il vraiment supprimer la balise priorité de vos sitemaps XML ?
- 16:32 Les URL courtes boostent-elles vraiment le référencement naturel ?
- 18:36 Pourquoi Google indexe-t-il des URLs non-canoniques même avec une balise canonical correcte ?
- 22:09 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les domaines en contenu dupliqué ?
- 28:49 Hreflang distingue-t-il vraiment les variantes régionales quand le contenu est identique ?
- 31:30 Pourquoi la stabilité des URLs d'images impacte-t-elle directement votre visibilité dans Google Images ?
- 33:35 Google ignore-t-il vraiment le texte incrusté dans vos images ?
- 36:57 Faut-il vraiment enregistrer la version HTTPS dans Search Console après une migration ?
- 38:17 Faut-il vraiment corriger les erreurs d'exploration dans la Search Console ?
- 45:27 Les liens sur images sans alt text sont-ils vraiment compris par Google ?
Google completely disregards the changefreq parameter in your XML sitemaps for controlling its crawl. The search engine relies on its own algorithms for detecting changes and its crawling history to determine the frequency of its bots' visits. Essentially, filling out this field is like SEO cargo cult: you waste time on a parameter that has absolutely no influence.
What you need to understand
What exactly is the changefreq parameter?
The changefreq is an optional element of the XML sitemap protocol that theoretically indicates how often a page is likely to be updated. Possible values range from "always" to "never," including daily, weekly, or monthly.
This parameter was introduced with the sitemap protocol 0.9 to help engines prioritize their crawling resources. The initial intention was simple: to allow webmasters to guide bots to pages that change frequently. However, Google has never truly played along.
Why doesn't Google use changefreq?
Google relies on its own change detection algorithms that are far more reliable than webmasters' declarations. The engine analyzes the actual history of changes to a page, its observed update speed, and builds a predictive model.
The pragmatic reason? Webmasters lie. Not out of malice, but out of ignorance or over-optimization. Declaring "always" on all pages to force a daily crawl had become commonplace. Google then developed its own metrics, making changefreq completely obsolete in its infrastructure.
The engine favors lastmod (last modified), which provides factual data rather than a declarative intention. But even lastmod is just one signal among many, far from being decisive.
Is this position recent or constant among Google?
Google has always been vague about the actual use of sitemap parameters. Official documentation mentions changefreq as a "suggestion" without ever guaranteeing it is taken into account. This explicit clarification confirms what many practitioners have suspected for years.
Field tests conducted by various SEO agencies already showed that changing changefreq made no difference in the observed crawl patterns in server logs. Google is now stating clearly: this parameter is useless in its ecosystem.
- Changefreq is ignored by Googlebot to determine crawl frequency
- Google uses its own predictive models based on the actual history of changes
- The lastmod parameter remains more relevant but is also not decisive
- This position is not new but has rarely been clarified so explicitly
- Other engines (Bing, Yandex) may have different policies regarding this parameter
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement correspond to field observations?
The server log analyses we've conducted for years completely confirm this position. Changing changefreq from "weekly" to "daily" across hundreds of pages has never resulted in a measurable increase in crawl. Googlebots follow their own logic, regardless of our suggestions.
What really influences the crawl frequency? The actual freshness of the content, the depth in the hierarchy, the internal PageRank of the page, and the server response speed. Googlebot learns from its previous visits: if a page declared "daily" never changes, it will space out its visits regardless of what the sitemap indicates.
Are there cases where changefreq could still be useful?
For Google? No, none. The declaration is unambiguous. However, other search engines may theoretically rely on this parameter. Bing, for example, has not communicated as clearly on the subject. [To be verified] if your traffic significantly comes from alternative engines.
In practice, even for other engines, the impact remains marginal at best. The time spent maintaining these values could be invested in optimizations that have a proven effect: content improvement, internal linking strategy, technical optimization.
Should you remove changefreq from your existing sitemaps?
It is not necessary. The presence of changefreq does not penalize your site, it is just unnecessary. If your sitemaps already contain it, you can leave it in place without issues. Google ignores it, period.
However, if you are generating new sitemaps or restructuring your infrastructure, don't waste time implementing this parameter. Focus on lastmod (which has marginal but real utility) and the quality of your URL list. A clean, up-to-date sitemap without 404 errors or redirections is what truly matters.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually change in your sitemap strategy?
First action: stop wasting time on changefreq. If you have processes that calculate or update this parameter, simplify them. Redirect these resources towards optimizations that have a real impact on crawl and indexing.
Focus on lastmod instead. This parameter indicates the date of the page's last actual modification. Google takes it into account (among other signals) to detect fresh content. Ensure that your CMS generates reliable and consistent lastmod values.
How to effectively optimize crawl if changefreq is useless?
The crawl budget can be managed through much more effective means. Server response speed, site architecture, internal linking quality, and removing unnecessary pages have a direct measurable impact. Google crawls more often on fast, well-structured sites with a low error rate.
Invest in analyzing your server logs to understand how Googlebot actually navigates your site. Identify over-crawled sections (infinite pagination, facets) and under-crawled sections (deep content). Adjust your robots.txt, noindex directives, and linking strategy accordingly.
What mistakes should we avoid now that we know Google's position?
Don’t fall into the trap of technical over-optimization. Some SEOs believe that by declaring "always" on all their important pages, they will force a daily crawl. That era is gone, if it ever existed. Google does not read these values.
Another common mistake: neglecting the rest of the sitemap by focusing on useless details. A sitemap with obsolete URLs, 404 errors, or redirections is problematic, regardless of the value of changefreq. Prioritize the quality of your URL list above all.
These technical optimizations for sitemaps and crawls can quickly become complex on larger sites or those with specific architectures. If you encounter persistent indexing issues or want to maximize your site's crawl efficiency, working with a specialized SEO agency can save you valuable time and avoid costly mistakes. Expert assistance helps to quickly identify the true optimization levers suited to your context.
- Stop spending time maintaining changefreq in your sitemaps
- Ensure that lastmod reflects the actual modifications of your pages
- Analyze your server logs to understand Googlebot's actual behavior
- Optimize server speed and reduce technical errors (404, 500, response times)
- Clean your sitemaps of obsolete URLs, redirections, and pages blocked in robots.txt
- Improve internal linking to facilitate the discovery of deep content
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je supprimer changefreq de mes sitemaps existants ?
Le paramètre lastmod est-il lui aussi inutile pour Google ?
Les autres moteurs comme Bing utilisent-ils changefreq ?
Comment puis-je vraiment augmenter la fréquence de crawl de mon site ?
Est-ce que mettre changefreq à 'always' peut nuire à mon site ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 48 min · published on 19/05/2016
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