Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:46 Les erreurs serveur dans Search Console reflètent-elles vraiment un problème de site ?
- 26:15 Google pénalise-t-il vraiment le contenu automatisé ou seulement la mauvaise qualité ?
- 33:37 Faut-il vraiment éviter les redirections pour supprimer des pages AMP de l'index Google ?
- 37:37 Les URLs relatifs affectent-ils vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
- 41:48 Faut-il s'inquiéter des backlinks provenant de flux RSS et Atom dans Search Console ?
- 49:52 Les erreurs 404 nuisent-elles vraiment à l'indexation de votre site ?
- 53:12 Les redirections 302 pénalisent-elles vraiment votre référencement ?
- 58:14 Pourquoi le temps de chargement au-dessus de la ligne de flottaison écrase-t-il le temps total de chargement de la page ?
- 62:11 Faut-il vraiment rendre tous vos scripts tiers asynchrones pour le SEO ?
Google claims that a fully AMP site can replace your traditional mobile pages without requiring separate versions. This approach simplifies technical architecture but imposes severe development constraints. From an SEO perspective, the challenge is to weigh the speed gains against the actual functional limitations of AMP before fully committing to this technology.
What you need to understand
Can AMP really serve as a unique mobile site?
Google officially validates that a site can function exclusively in AMP for mobile users without maintaining a parallel classic mobile version. This means that technically, you can serve only AMP pages to your smartphone visitors without having to manage a separate mobile architecture in standard responsive HTML.
This statement breaks away from the common notion that AMP must necessarily be an alternative version coexisting with a canonical mobile version. Google's message is clear: AMP can be your only and unique mobile version, provided that it meets the functional needs of your users.
What are the technical advantages of this approach?
The architecture simplifies drastically. No need to maintain two mobile versions (AMP + classic HTML), which reduces development complexity and eliminates the risks of duplicate content or conflicting signals sent to search engines. You manage a single code source for mobile.
Loading performance is mechanically optimized as AMP imposes strict constraints on resource weight, JavaScript execution, and rendering. Google can preload these pages in its cache, speeding up display from search results. For a high-traffic e-commerce or media site, the speed gains are measurable.
Why does Google say 'sometimes beneficial' and not 'always'?
Google's cautious wording hides a reality: AMP imposes functional limitations that not all sites can accept. Custom JavaScript components are prohibited, complex forms become challenging to implement, and some advanced interactive functionalities are impossible.
A reservation site with a complex user journey, a product configurator, or a SaaS platform probably cannot fit within AMP's constraints without sacrificing critical functionalities. Google knows this and avoids generalization. The phrase 'sometimes beneficial' means: assess whether your business model supports AMP's restrictions before fully committing to it.
- AMP can be your unique mobile version without requiring a classic HTML duplicate
- Architectural simplification: a single mobile code to maintain, less duplication
- Guaranteed performance due to AMP's strict technical constraints
- Real limitations on custom JavaScript and complex interactions
- Variable relevance depending on your model: media/blog = yes, interactive platform = no
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, but with a major nuance. Sites that have opted for a 100% mobile AMP are primarily media and blogs whose model relies on the consumption of static content. In these cases, feedback shows real gains in mobile traffic via the AMP carousel and improvements in Core Web Vitals.
In contrast, no major e-commerce player has migrated to a solely AMP mobile site. Why? Because complex shopping journeys, dynamic filters, product configurators, and comparison tools do not pass the tests of AMP without altering their essence. Google remains intentionally vague about the types of sites involved. [To verify]: no public case study documents a complex transactional site functioning solely in AMP on the mobile side.
What are the hidden risks of this approach?
The first trap is technological dependency. If you bet everything on AMP and Google changes its validation criteria or reduces display benefits in the SERPs, you are stuck. AMP is a standard controlled by Google, even though it is officially open-source via the AMP Project.
The second risk concerns true user experience. AMP pages load quickly, granted, but if your mobile conversion relies on rich interactions (real-time chat, dynamic personalization, advanced A/B testing), you will face the framework's limitations. The result: fast pages but less commercially effective. Sometimes, a well-optimized classic mobile HTML page is better than a constrained AMP.
In what cases is this strategy truly relevant?
A 100% mobile AMP site is justified if you meet three cumulative criteria: predominantly static content, dominant mobile traffic coming from Google, and no critical dependence on complex JavaScript interactions. Typically, an online magazine, a news blog, or a recipe site.
If your monetization relies on multi-step forms, advanced user account features, or interactive tools, forget it. You will lose more in conversion than you gain in visibility. The calculation must be economic before being technical: measure the business impact of an AMP simplification before undertaking a complete overhaul.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you check before going 100% mobile AMP?
Start with a complete functional audit of your current mobile site. List all JavaScript interactions, forms, third-party components (chat, customer reviews, external videos), and check their compatibility with official AMP components. If more than 20% of your functionalities require heavy adaptations, the ROI is likely negative.
Next, measure your mobile traffic coming from Google. If less than 40% of your mobile sessions come from organic search, the potential gains from AMP will be marginal. The AMP carousel and preloading only impact SEO traffic, not direct or social. Also, identify your high-conversion pages: if they require rich interactions, do not constrain them with AMP.
How to implement a mobile site solely in AMP without losing conversions?
Take a gradual approach. Start by migrating only the editorial content pages (articles, guides, blog categories) to pure AMP, and keep your transactional pages (purchase funnel, complex contact forms) in classic mobile HTML. Use cross-canonical links to maintain a coherent architecture.
Thoroughly test the critical user journeys in AMP. Ensure that your forms function, your CTAs are clickable, and that tracking events (Analytics, tag manager) work correctly. AMP imposes specific components (amp-form, amp-analytics) that do not behave like standard HTML. Do not deploy in production without validating conversions on a sample.
What mistakes to avoid during a 100% AMP migration?
Never sacrifice user experience on the altar of technical performance. An ultra-fast AMP page that frustrates the user due to a lack of features will cost more in bounce rates than it will gain in Google positions. Measure the actual impact on your business KPIs before generalizing.
Also, avoid unnecessarily duplicating content. If you maintain non-AMP desktop versions and AMP mobile, ensure that canonical and alternate tags are correctly configured to avoid conflicting signals. Google must understand that the AMP version is the primary mobile version, not an optional alternative.
- Audit the compatibility of your critical features with official AMP components
- Measure the actual weight of Google mobile traffic in your acquisition mix
- Test conversion journeys on an AMP sample before full deployment
- Check that Analytics events and advertisement tracking work correctly
- Configure canonical/alternate tags to avoid content duplication
- Compare Core Web Vitals for AMP vs optimized mobile HTML to assess the real gain
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site 100% AMP mobile perd-il des fonctionnalités par rapport à un site HTML classique ?
Google favorise-t-il encore les pages AMP dans les résultats de recherche mobile ?
Peut-on utiliser Google Analytics et les tags publicitaires sur un site 100% AMP ?
Faut-il maintenir une version desktop non-AMP si le mobile est 100% AMP ?
Comment mesurer si un site 100% AMP mobile améliore réellement le trafic et les conversions ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h05 · published on 15/06/2017
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