Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 2:02 Are link exchanges for content really punishable by Google?
- 2:02 Can you really use lazy loading and data-nosnippet to control what Google displays in the SERPs?
- 2:22 Can exchanging content for backlinks trigger a Google penalty?
- 2:22 Should you really use data-nosnippet to control your search snippets?
- 2:22 Should you really ban external reviews from your Schema.org structured data?
- 3:38 Does a 1:1 domain migration truly transfer ALL ranking signals?
- 3:39 Does a domain migration really transfer all ranking signals?
- 5:11 Why doesn't merging two websites ever double your SEO traffic?
- 5:11 Why does merging two websites lead to traffic loss even with perfect redirects?
- 6:26 Should you really think twice before splitting your site into multiple domains?
- 6:36 Is splitting a website into multiple domains a strategic mistake to avoid?
- 8:22 Can a polluted domain really handicap your SEO for over a year?
- 8:24 Can the history of an expired domain hold back your rankings for months?
- 14:03 Does Google really evaluate Core Web Vitals by section or does it apply to the entire domain?
- 14:06 Can Google really evaluate Core Web Vitals section by section on your site?
- 19:27 Why does Google ignore your canonical and hreflang tags if your HTML is poorly structured?
- 19:58 Why can your critical SEO tags be completely ignored by Google?
- 23:39 Do you really need to specify a time zone in the lastmod tag of your XML sitemap?
- 23:39 How might a missing timezone in your XML sitemaps jeopardize your crawl?
- 24:40 Why does Google ignore identical lastmod dates in your XML sitemaps?
- 24:40 Why does Google ignore identical modification dates in XML sitemaps?
- 25:44 How does alternating between noindex and index jeopardize your crawl budget?
- 25:44 Is alternating between index and noindex really dooming your pages to Google's oblivion?
- 29:59 Does the Ad Experience Report really influence Google rankings?
- 29:59 Does the Ad Experience Report really influence Google rankings?
- 33:29 Is it really necessary to break all your pagination links for Google to prioritize page 1?
- 33:42 Should you really prioritize incremental linking for pagination instead of linking everything from page 1?
- 37:31 Why do your rendering tests fail while Google indexes your page correctly?
- 39:27 How does Google really index your pages: by keywords or by documents?
- 39:27 Does Google really create keywords from your content, or is the process the other way around?
- 40:30 How does Google manage to comprehend 15% of queries it has never seen before through machine learning?
- 43:03 Why does recovery from a Page Layout penalty take months?
- 44:36 Does Google impose a maximum threshold for ads within the viewport?
- 47:29 Does content syndication really harm your organic search ranking?
- 51:31 Does a 302 redirect ultimately equate to a 301 in terms of SEO?
- 51:31 Should You Really Worry About 302 Redirects During a Migration Error?
- 53:34 Should you really host your news blog on the same domain as your product site?
- 53:40 Should you isolate your blog or news section on a separate domain?
Google states that recovery after a Page Layout Algorithm penalty takes 2 to 5 months, the time it takes for the engine to reprocess a substantial portion of the site. In concrete terms, merely fixing your intrusive ads at the top of the page isn't enough — you must wait for Google to recrawl and reevaluate all your templates. This time frame reflects the heaviness of the algorithmic requalification process, not the technical difficulty of the fix itself.
What you need to understand
What is the Page Layout Algorithm and why does it take months to update?
The Page Layout Algorithm (also known as "Top Heavy") targets sites that display an excessive volume of ads above the fold, forcing the user to scroll to access actual content. Initially launched in 2012, this algorithm operates in waves of reevaluations — it does not update in real time.
The 2 to 5-month window is explained by the fact that Google needs to recrawl, reindex, and reprocess a significant volume of pages to ascertain that the change is not cosmetic or limited to a few URLs. The algorithm aims to validate a structural change site-wide, not a one-off tweak.
Why can't Google just check the homepage and validate the fix?
Because many sites apply different advertising rules depending on the types of pages — clean homepage, ad-saturated internal pages. Google wants to ensure that the advertising pattern has been corrected across all critical templates: categories, articles, product sheets.
The massive reprocessing also requires that Googlebot has actually recrawled these pages. If your crawl budget is low or your URLs are infrequently visited, the delay grows mechanically. Hence the broad range of 2 to 5 months.
Do all penalized sites take the same time to recover?
No. A site with a high crawl budget, a clean architecture, and strong quality signals (solid Core Web Vitals, low bounce rate) will recover faster than a technically shaky site with thousands of orphan pages. The speed of recovery also depends on the depth of the initial penalty — a slightly affected site may bounce back in 6-8 weeks, while a heavily sanctioned site may stagnate for 5 months.
Google does not publish any metrics to predict exactly where you stand within this range. You're in the dark until the rankings improve.
- The Page Layout Algorithm penalizes excessive ads above the fold.
- Recovery takes 2 to 5 months as Google needs to reprocess a large portion of the site.
- The timeline varies depending on the crawl budget, architecture, and depth of the penalty.
- Fixing the templates is not enough — you must wait for the recrawl and algorithmic reevaluation.
- No official indicators allow tracking recovery progress.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this 2 to 5-month range consistent with on-the-ground observations?
Yes and no. On well-crawled sites with a clean Search Console, complete recoveries are indeed observed within 8 to 12 weeks after fixing — which is the lower end of the range. However, on sites with a history of poor quality, degraded UX signals, or complex architecture, the 5 months are often exceeded. [To be verified]: Google never specifies if these 2-5 months start from the correction date or the date of the first significant recrawl.
Another tricky point is the definition of "recovery." Is it a return to 100% of pre-penalty traffic, or simply the lifting of the algorithmic filter? In practice, many sites recover partially — they never regain their initial level, indicating that other quality signals have degraded their ranking in the meantime.
What nuances should be considered for this statement?
First, the Page Layout Algorithm works in waves of updates — it is not real-time like Panda post-2016. This means that even after a complete recrawl, you may be waiting for the next wave of algorithmic refresh. Google has not publicly communicated about these waves for years, making any prediction risky.
Furthermore, fixing ads does not guarantee success if other UX signals are poor: intrusive popups, mobile interstitials, catastrophic CLS. The Page Layout Algorithm is part of a quality filter ecosystem — if you are simultaneously affected by other algorithms (Helpful Content, Product Reviews), recovery will be masked by these other penalties.
What situations does this 2-5 month rule not apply to?
If your site has undergone a manual action in addition to the algorithmic filter, the recovery timeline is decoupled. You can lift the manual action in a few days through a reconsideration request, but the algorithmic filter will follow its own timetable. The two are not synchronized.
Another situation is for sites that have migrated domains or massively restructured their hierarchy during the penalty period. Google then has to rebuild its understanding graph of the site, which mechanically extends the timeline — sometimes beyond 6 months.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should you take after fixing the ads?
First, force a massive recrawl through the Search Console — submit your main sitemaps, use the URL inspection tool on your key templates (homepage, typical category page, typical product page). The goal is to speed up the acknowledgment of changes by Googlebot.
Next, monitor your server logs to verify that Google is actually recrawling your modified pages. If the recrawl rate remains low 3-4 weeks after making corrections, it indicates that your crawl budget is insufficient — then you need to work on the architecture (removing unnecessary facets, consolidating URLs, improving server response time).
How can you measure recovery progress without any official indicator?
Create a dedicated segment in Google Analytics (or GA4) to isolate organic traffic from historically impacted pages. Track the weekly evolution of sessions, bounce rate, and average session duration — real recovery translates into a gradual increase in these KPIs.
On the rankings side, track your strategic keywords with a third-party tool (SEMrush, Ahrefs, Monitorank). Recovery will not be abrupt — you will first see a rebound in positions for long-tail queries, and then gradually for head terms. If nothing changes after 3 months, it means that either Google has not yet processed the site, or other quality filters are blocking you.
What mistakes should be avoided during the waiting period?
Do not over-optimize in panic response. Many sites, seeing that nothing changes after 6 weeks, start removing ALL ads, including legitimate and non-intrusive ones. The result: loss of revenue without SEO gain, as the problem was not the overall volume but the placement above the fold.
Another classic mistake: launching a redesign or migration during the recovery period. You then add a layer of complexity that prolongs the timelines — Google must simultaneously reevaluate your layout AND rebuild its understanding of your new architecture. Wait for complete recovery before any structural work.
- Force the recrawl of modified templates via Search Console and sitemap.
- Monitor server logs to check that Googlebot is indeed revisiting corrected pages.
- Create a dedicated Analytics segment to track organic traffic progress.
- Follow rankings for strategic keywords with a third-party tool, week by week.
- Do not remove ALL ads out of excessive zeal — only those above the fold pose a problem.
- Postpone any redesign or migration until recovery is confirmed.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on accélérer la récupération en soumettant une demande de réexamen dans la Search Console ?
Si je corrige mes publicités mais que mon trafic ne remonte pas après 5 mois, que faire ?
Est-ce que supprimer toutes les publicités accélère la récupération ?
Comment savoir si mon site est touché par Page Layout Algorithm plutôt qu'un autre filtre qualité ?
Le délai de 2-5 mois commence-t-il à la date de correction ou à la date du recrawl ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 16/10/2020
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.