Official statement
Other statements from this video 29 ▾
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- □ Does it really matter whether you submit your sitemap in robots.txt or Search Console?
- □ Do H1-H6 heading tags really still impact Google rankings?
- □ Is a strict heading tag hierarchy really necessary for SEO rankings?
- □ How long does Google actually take to fully process a domain migration?
- □ Can a site migration really boost your SEO rankings or destroy them completely?
- □ Does Googlebot really crawl from just one place when indexing your geo-targeted content?
- □ Can a noindex tag on geolocalized pages wipe your entire website from Google search results?
- □ Should you really ditch geo-redirects for a simple dynamic banner?
- □ How many location pages can you create before Google penalizes you for spam?
- □ Should you redirect mobile users to your app—and what are the hidden SEO risks?
- □ Do you really need to translate your pages word-for-word for hreflang to work effectively?
- □ Does the domain directive in your Disavow file really help you bypass Google's 2MB limit?
- □ Should you really use the Disavow tool only for purchased links?
- □ Should you noindex your internal search results pages to prevent spammers from creating backlinks?
- □ Does semantic HTML really boost your search rankings?
- □ Is AMP still a ranking factor in Google Search?
- □ Is AMP really a ranking factor for Google?
- □ Does removing AMP actually boost crawl on your regular pages?
- □ Should you test removing your Disavow file incrementally, or can you delete it all at once?
- □ Why do knowledge panels display differently across devices and search contexts?
- □ Does Google's synonym system really work without any human intervention?
- □ Should you really create a separate page for each location to implement Local Business schema correctly?
- □ Do you really need to display all FAQ schema questions visibly on your page?
- □ Can hidden accordion content really show up in featured snippets?
- □ Why does Google deliberately choose not to index your entire website?
- □ Should you delete pages to boost your site's indexation?
- □ Does search volume of anchor text really impact the value of your internal links?
- □ Should you really add unique content to your e-commerce product pages?
Google officially allows partial markup: you don't need to tag your entire content with structured data. If you have 20 FAQs on a page, marking up 5 is enough — as long as they remain visible. The requirement focuses on consistency between markup and displayed content, not on exhaustiveness.
What you need to understand
This statement from Mueller is cracking a widespread belief: that you must systematically tag the entirety of a content type as soon as you use a schema.
Many professionals apply binary logic — either you mark everything, or nothing. Google says the opposite: markup can be selective, as long as it accurately reflects what is visible.
What is Google's exact rule?
The constraint is straightforward: structured data must correspond to content that is actually displayed on the page. No invention, no hidden content.
Conversely, the reverse is not true — all visible content doesn't need to be marked. You choose what you highlight with the schema, within the limits of what is present.
Why does this nuance change everything?
It opens the door to a strategic approach to markup. Rather than mechanically tagging 20 identical FAQs, you select the 5 with the most potential for rich results.
Concretely, it means less unnecessary code, lower risk of errors, and better control over what is exposed to Google.
- Partial markup allowed: no obligation for exhaustiveness on a content type
- Consistency required: what is marked must be visible on the page
- Selective approach: prioritize high-potential content rather than defaulting to marking everything
- No hidden content: schema cannot be used to inject invisible content
SEO Expert opinion
Is this flexibility really new?
No — and that's precisely what makes this statement interesting. Google has never officially required exhaustive markup, but the SEO ecosystem has imposed this constraint on itself.
Schema.org guidelines remain vague on this point. Validation tools sometimes flag "missed opportunities" without it being a technical error. Result: many sites over-tag out of caution.
What's the trap in this statement?
Mueller doesn't specify how much markup is sufficient, or whether a minimum threshold exists. 5 FAQs out of 20, OK — but 1 out of 20? 2 out of 50?
Another gray area: what happens if marked content changes regularly (e.g., FAQ rotation based on context)? Does Google tolerate variance between crawls? [To be verified]
How does this rule align with rich results?
Google never guarantees rich snippet display, even with perfect markup. Here, selectivity becomes an advantage: you concentrate your efforts on content that truly deserves to be highlighted.
In practice, marking 5 ultra-relevant FAQs rather than 20 average ones can improve your chances of getting displayed — Google prioritizes quality of marked content, not quantity.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do on your existing pages?
Audit your pages with FAQ, Recipe, HowTo, or Product markup. Identify those where you've tagged systematically without thinking about the value of each element.
Ask yourself: among these 15 marked FAQs, which ones really have click potential in SERPs? Which are redundant or weak?
How do you choose which elements to mark?
Prioritize content that answers actual questions from your audience — cross-reference with your Search Console data. A marked FAQ matching a frequently asked question has a better chance of being displayed.
Avoid marking generic or duplicate content. If 3 FAQs say the same thing with different wording, keep only one in the schema.
- Take inventory of pages with FAQ, Recipe, HowTo, Product markup
- Identify marked elements that provide no differentiating value
- Cross-reference your marked FAQs with actual Search Console queries
- Test impact on rich results with Google's Rich Results Test
- Document your selection strategy to maintain consistency long-term
- Monitor impressions/clicks evolution after markup adjustments
This statement validates a qualitative approach to markup: 5 relevant, well-chosen elements beat 20 tagged by default. Focus your efforts on what makes sense for users and your visibility strategy.
Implementing structured data with strategic logic requires careful analysis of your content, SERP performance, and business goals. If you lack in-house resources or expertise to conduct this audit and prioritize effectively, guidance from a specialized SEO agency can save time and avoid missteps — especially on high-volume content sites where each markup choice has cumulative impact.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Si je marque seulement 3 FAQ sur 15, Google va-t-il me pénaliser ?
Puis-je alterner les FAQ marquées d'une semaine à l'autre ?
Le markup partiel s'applique-t-il aussi aux fiches produit ?
Faut-il retirer le markup des FAQ de faible qualité sur mes pages existantes ?
Google peut-il afficher en rich result une FAQ non marquée ?
🎥 From the same video 29
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 14/01/2022
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