Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 0:33 Comment exploiter les nouveaux types de données structurées pour le Knowledge Graph ?
- 1:05 Le nouvel outil de test des données structurées change-t-il vraiment la donne pour les SEO ?
- 2:06 Vos retours influencent-ils vraiment la roadmap des outils Google Search Console ?
- 15:23 Les erreurs 404 dans votre sitemap nuisent-elles vraiment à votre SEO ?
- 15:55 Le mobile-friendly va-t-il devenir un critère de ranking différenciant sur smartphone ?
- 29:21 L'hébergement géographique influence-t-il vraiment le référencement local ?
- 30:03 Les redirections 301 sont-elles vraiment suffisantes pour réussir une migration de site ?
- 46:53 Combien de temps faut-il maintenir les redirections 301 après une migration de domaine ?
- 59:03 Le fournisseur de certificat SSL influence-t-il le classement Google ?
- 61:01 Faut-il vraiment privilégier la qualité sur la quantité de pages en e-commerce ?
- 62:00 Comment optimiser vos titres pour booster le taux de clics sans risquer la pénalité ?
- 69:04 Google modifie vos balises title : faut-il s'inquiéter pour votre SEO ?
Google confirms that an excess of links on a page dilutes the PageRank passed to each one. For an SEO, this means that a page with 200 internal links will pass less juice to each destination than a page with 30 carefully selected links. The challenge is to prioritize your internal links to concentrate power on the pages that truly matter, rather than linking everything to everything.
What you need to understand
What exactly is PageRank, and why is its dilution a concern?
PageRank remains one of the fundamentals of Google's algorithm, even if it is less talked about than before. Each page on your site has a pool of SEO juice that it can pass through its outgoing links. The more links a page contains, the more this pool gets fragmented.
In practical terms? If a page has a PageRank of 10 and contains 10 links, each link theoretically receives 1 point. With 100 links, each link only receives 0.1 points. This dilution is not trivial when you're trying to boost strategic pages in the SERPs.
Why is Mueller emphasizing this point right now?
Google has likely observed an increase in footer links, long menus, and overloaded sidebars. Some sites mechanically add dozens of links to each template without considering the impact on PageRank distribution.
The message is clear: every link counts. If you place 150 links in your footer that's present on all pages, you sabotage the transfer of value to your priority pages. Mueller reminds us that a strategic internal linking structure must be thought of as a system of communicating vessels, not as a comprehensive directory.
How does this dilution specifically affect ranking?
A buried page deep within the site, but well-linked from the homepage with few competing links, can significantly rise. Conversely, an important page drowned among 200 other links loses algorithmic visibility.
PageRank dilution combines with other signals: click depth, semantic context of anchors, positioning within the DOM. But the number of links remains an underestimated lever. A page with 30 well-chosen links will almost always outperform a page with 200 generic links in terms of juice transfer.
- PageRank is divided among all outgoing links from a page
- A cluttered footer dilutes the juice passed from each page on the site
- Fewer internal links = more power for each retained link
- The site's structure must prioritize strategic pages in the linking
- Combining internal linking and click depth optimizes PageRank distribution
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation really new or just a reminder?
Let’s be honest: the concept of PageRank dilution is nothing new. What’s changing is that Google is explicitly stating it while for years, SEOs were told that 'the number of links doesn't really matter.'
In practice, audits show that a drastic pruning of the footer can unlock stagnation situations. I've seen sites go from 180 links per page to 40, with a 15-20% increase in crawl budget and deep page ranking improvements. Mueller isn’t saying anything revolutionary, but he is validating practices that some found anecdotal.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
PageRank dilution isn’t an absolute problem. A mega-menu with 80 links can be justified on an e-commerce site with 500 categories, if user navigation depends on it. The risk is falling into the opposite dogma: removing useful links just to 'optimize PR.'
Mueller doesn’t specify a numerical threshold. 50 links? 100? 200? [To be verified] on your own site through testing. The real question is: how many of these links are actually clicked or serve the user journey? A footer with 120 links, 110 of which have 0 clicks per month, deserves revision, that’s a fact.
In what cases does this rule not strictly apply?
News sites, wikis, and forums naturally have patterns of dense linking. Google knows how to differentiate a site with 200 links per page due to complex UX from a site that is spamming its footer with useless links.
Another case: hub pages or pillar pages. If a page serves as a thematic entry point with 60 contextual links to subtopics, it’s legitimate. The problem arises when all pages on the site carry 150 identical links through the template. There, dilution becomes systemic.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can I quickly audit PageRank dilution on my site?
First step: extract the number of internal links per page using Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Identify pages with more than 100 outgoing links. Then, cross-reference this data with actual click rates in Search Console or GA4: how many of these links are actually being used?
If 80% of the links in your footer have never been clicked, you have a perfect candidate for pruning. Also, look at the click depth: are strategic pages accessible in 2-3 clicks, or buried in 5-level menus?
What concrete actions should be taken to optimize PageRank transmission?
Trim down the footer and sidebar. Keep only necessary legal links, contact pages, and 3-5 links to your most strategic pages. Everything else can migrate to an HTML 'Sitemap' page, which itself will receive a discreet link in the footer.
Strengthen the contextual linking in the body of your content. A link placed in a relevant paragraph, with an optimized anchor, passes more juice and semantic context than a link lost in a list of 80 items. Think 'quality over quantity': better to have 3 relevant links than an exhaustive menu.
How do I measure the impact of reducing the number of links?
After intervention, monitor three metrics: crawl budget (how often Googlebot visits deep pages), ranking of strategic pages (those you chose to link better), and overall organic traffic. The effects can be measured over 4-8 weeks.
Also compare the distribution of internal traffic: if your priority pages are capturing more visits from landing pages, that’s a good sign. A tool like Google Analytics 4 with user flow reports can help you. If nothing changes after 2 months, it's either because you didn’t cut enough, or the ranking issue was elsewhere.
- Extract the number of internal links per page (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl)
- Identify pages with more than 100 outgoing links and audit their relevance
- Drastically reduce links in footer/sidebar (keep < 20 links)
- Strengthen contextual linking in content towards strategic pages
- Create an HTML 'Sitemap' page for secondary links
- Monitor crawl budget, positions, and organic traffic over 4-8 weeks
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quel est le nombre maximum de liens internes recommandé par page ?
Les liens en nofollow évitent-ils la dilution du PageRank ?
Faut-il supprimer complètement les menus déroulants pour optimiser le PageRank ?
Comment prioriser les pages à renforcer dans mon maillage interne ?
Un sitemap XML compense-t-il une mauvaise structure de liens internes ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h11 · published on 16/01/2015
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.