Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 2:45 Le snippet Google doit-il toujours correspondre exactement à la page de destination ?
- 3:45 Google détecte-t-il vraiment tout seul la langue de votre site multilingue ?
- 10:01 Faut-il vraiment multiplier les domaines pour son SEO international ?
- 12:02 Google peut-il ignorer vos versions linguistiques si elles se ressemblent trop ?
- 12:41 Les iframes nuisent-elles vraiment au SEO de votre site ?
- 19:33 Pourquoi la Search Console affiche-t-elle des erreurs de données structurées introuvables ailleurs ?
- 22:11 Comment le hreflang détermine-t-il vraiment quelle version de votre site Google affiche ?
- 22:25 Faut-il vraiment traiter vos pages AMP comme du contenu principal pour qu'elles soient indexées ?
- 34:12 Pourquoi Google abandonne-t-il progressivement les pages redirigées vers des erreurs 403 ?
- 38:24 Comment Google traite-t-il vraiment les liens internes dupliqués sur une même page ?
- 41:02 Pourquoi les URLs avec hashbangs (#!) sont-elles un boulet pour votre référencement ?
- 61:18 Pourquoi un double canonical AMP/desktop peut-il tuer l'affichage de vos pages ?
Google claims to penalize speed only in extreme cases of slowness. For most sites, basic optimization is sufficient if latency is not catastrophic. This statement downplays the obsession with Core Web Vitals while remaining vague about what constitutes "extreme slowness".
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by "extremely slow"?
Müller does not provide specific numbers. This deliberately vague wording leaves SEOs in uncertainty. Punishments are discussed only in cases of catastrophic user experience, but without a quantified threshold.
Field observations suggest a site must be truly unusable to experience a direct negative impact. A FCP beyond 5-6 seconds or an LCP exceeding 10 seconds could fall into this category, but these are merely hypotheses based on the analysis of penalized sites.
Does this statement contradict the importance of Core Web Vitals?
No, it simply adds nuance. Core Web Vitals continue to be a ranking signal, but their actual weight in the algorithm seems less significant than what Google's marketing hype implied.
The key distinction: there is a difference between not receiving a ranking boost (average speed) and facing an active penalty (catastrophic speed). Most sites fall into the gray area where speed has a marginal influence, creating neither a decisive advantage nor a fatal handicap.
Why does Google maintain this ambiguity?
Keeping strategic ambiguity allows Google to adjust its criteria without needing to publicly communicate every change. If Müller provided a precise threshold today, Google would be forced to adhere to it or publicly explain any changes.
This evasive communication also serves to discourage minimal optimizations. By not defining an acceptable floor, Google encourages aiming for excellence rather than the minimum requirement, without promising a proportional reward for the effort.
- No quantified threshold is provided to define "extreme slowness"
- Most sites with average performance are neither significantly penalized nor rewarded
- Core Web Vitals influence ranking but are not an isolated decisive factor
- Google deliberately maintains a gray area to retain its algorithmic flexibility
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, for the most part. A/B testing on speed rarely shows dramatic ranking variations, except when transitioning from a truly broken site to a functional one. Speed improvements more often lead to indirect gains (bounce rates, engagement) than significant jumps in the SERPs.
However, [To be verified] the impact varies greatly by sector. In e-commerce and on mobile, the speed-conversion correlation is well documented, which can indirectly influence SEO through behavioral signals. Müller simplifies by only talking about direct penalties.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
First nuance: speed affects crawl budget. A slow site will be crawled less frequently, delaying the indexing of new content. This is not a "penalty" in the strict sense, but the SEO impact is real, especially for large sites.
Second nuance: Core Web Vitals are a tie-breaker signal when two pages have equivalent relevance scores. In competitive queries, this slight advantage can make the difference between position 3 and position 8.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
News sites and fresh content are more sensitive. Google prioritizes freshness, but if the server is too slow to allow frequent crawling, you lose your temporal advantage. Speed then becomes indirectly critical.
Sites with high SEO competition and low content differentiators also experience amplified impact. When everyone produces similar content, speed can become the deciding factor, even if Müller downplays its overall importance.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done practically with this information?
Stop optimizing pixel-perfect to achieve a perfect score that will not translate into measurable traffic gain. Focus your efforts where user impact is real: loading times on mobile 3G/4G, perceived interactivity, visual stability.
Invest in basic infrastructure rather than cosmetic optimization. A properly configured CDN, effective image compression, and decent hosting suffice in 80% of cases. The rest often comes down to perfectionism without ROI.
How to identify if your site is in the risk zone?
Test under degraded real conditions: average mobile connection, mid-range device, without cache. If your site takes more than 8-10 seconds to display usable content, you may be in the penalty zone.
Monitor your crawl metrics in Search Console. If the average response time exceeds 800ms-1s, or if you see regular timeout errors, it's a warning sign. Google is indirectly telling you that your site is too slow to be crawled efficiently.
What mistakes to avoid following this statement?
Do not fall into total inaction on the grounds that Google only penalizes extreme cases. Your users penalize well before Google. A site that loads in 4 seconds is already losing 50% of mobile visitors.
Avoid obsessing over the PageSpeed Insights score at the expense of real experience. A score of 85 with a smooth experience is better than a score of 95 achieved by sabotaging useful features. Google's tools measure proxies, not the complete user experience.
- Audit your site under degraded mobile conditions, not from your fiber connection
- Fix blocking issues (slow server, unoptimized images, blocking JavaScript) before fine-tuning details
- Monitor server response time and crawl errors in Search Console
- Measure real impact on your conversions and engagement rather than chasing a perfect score
- Prioritize strategic pages (landing pages, top products) rather than uniformly optimizing the entire site
- Document your changes and their measurable impacts to identify what really works
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quel est le seuil de vitesse en dessous duquel Google pénalise un site ?
Faut-il encore investir dans l'amélioration des Core Web Vitals ?
Un score PageSpeed Insights moyen pénalise-t-il mon référencement ?
La vitesse affecte-t-elle le budget de crawl de Googlebot ?
Comment savoir si mon site est dans la zone de pénalité pour vitesse ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 30/11/2017
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