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Official statement

Google considers the overall quality structure of a site, giving more weight to pages that are more visible and directly accessible from the homepage. However, this does not mean that deeper or less directly linked pages can be ignored.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:42 💬 EN 📅 27/06/2019 ✂ 10 statements
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Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google gives more weight to pages that are directly accessible from the homepage, but deep pages shouldn't be overlooked either. The overall quality structure of the site matters, and a buried page can rank well if it is high-quality and relevant. Accessibility from the homepage remains a priority signal, but it's just one factor among others in the ranking equation.

What you need to understand

What does Google mean by "more visible" and "directly accessible" pages?

Google measures the depth of pages based on the number of clicks needed from the homepage to reach them. A page accessible in 1 click is considered more important than a page buried 5 or 6 levels deep in navigation. This signal reflects the architecture logic: what you highlight on your site reveals what you deem a priority.

This hierarchy is not just a question of crawling and crawl budget. It's also a relevance signal: pages close to the homepage generally receive more internal link juice, are updated more frequently, and capitalize on the authority of the homepage. Google deduces an editorial intent — you value this content.

Why do deep pages remain important despite this differentiated weight?

Because depth is not an absolute criterion of quality or relevance. A page buried 4 clicks deep that perfectly answers a long-tail query, has a good contextual internal linking structure, and backlinks can outperform a mediocre level 1 page. Google does not operate with a binary algorithm where depth negates all other signals.

Mueller specifies that Google looks at the overall quality structure of the site. In practical terms: a site with 95% high-quality deep pages and 5% low-quality shallow pages will be rated better than a site with the opposite structure. Depth modulates the initial weight, but intrinsic quality remains decisive.

How does this statement impact the SEO architecture strategy?

It confirms that information architecture is not just a UX issue but a direct SEO lever. Placing your strategic pages within reach of a click from the homepage sends a priority signal to Google. Conversely, burying important content in inaccessible sub-subcategories dilutes their ranking potential.

But beware of the trap: artificially pulling all pages to 1 click from the homepage via a mega-menu or overloaded footer makes no sense. Google detects editorial consistency and relevance in linking. What matters is the logic of natural navigation and functional accessibility, not gaming the number of clicks.

  • The depth of pages influences the weight Google gives them, but does not negate other ranking factors
  • Pages close to the homepage benefit from a priority signal and better distribution of internal PageRank
  • The overall quality of the site overrides depth: a site with excellent deep pages will be rated better than a site with mediocre shallow pages
  • The architecture must reflect your strategic priorities, not attempt to artificially manipulate click numbers
  • Contextual internal linking can partially compensate for depth by redistributing authority to key pages

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, largely. It has been observed for years that pages accessible in 2-3 clicks maximum from the homepage tend to be crawled more frequently, accumulate more internal authority, and rank more easily under similar context. E-commerce sites that elevate their bestsellers to the homepage generally see an improvement in their rankings for those products.

But it’s important to qualify: on sites with strong authority and excellent internal linking, very deep pages can perfectly dominate competitive SERPs. Wikipedia is a perfect example — some pages buried 6-7 clicks deep rank in position 1 on competitive queries because the quality, backlinks, and semantic context significantly compensate for depth.

What uncertainties remain in Mueller's statement?

Mueller remains deliberately vague about the thresholds. After how many clicks does the depth penalty become significant? 4 clicks? 6? 10? Impossible to say. Google will never communicate a precise figure, but experience shows that beyond 3-4 clicks, the weight decreases noticeably on medium-sized sites. [To verify] depending on each site's size and authority.

Another point of ambiguity: the notion of "overall quality structure". How does Google assess this overall quality? Aggregation of Core Web Vitals? Ratio of thin vs. substantial content? Pogo-sticking rate? Probably a mix of all that, but without concrete details, we remain on interpretations. What is certain is that massively neglecting your deep pages creates a negative overall signal.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

On high-authority domain sites, depth matters much less. A site like the New York Times or Reuters can publish an article buried in an obscure subcategory and see it rank in a few hours due to overall authority, ultra-frequent crawling, and automatic backlinks. Depth is a relative factor, not absolute.

Another exception: pages targeting ultra-niche queries with little competition. If you are the only one deeply covering a hyper-specific topic, even a page 7 clicks deep from the homepage can dominate the SERP. The lack of competition negates the effect of depth. In these cases, focus on content quality and semantic internal linking.

Attention: Do not confuse click depth with URL depth. A page accessible via /category/sub-category/product but highlighted in a sticky menu is considered shallow. What matters is the actual number of clicks in navigation, not the URL structure.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you concretely optimize the depth of your strategic pages?

Start with a crawl depth audit using Screaming Frog or OnCrawl. Identify all pages deeper than 3-4 clicks from the homepage, then cross-reference with your performance data: which pages generate traffic, conversions, or target strategic keywords? These pages should be elevated within the architecture.

Integrate them into the main navigation, category menus, or editorial blocks on the homepage and pillar pages. You can also create thematic hub pages that centralize links to your priority content. The goal: reduce the number of clicks while maintaining editorial consistency. Avoid artificial shortcuts like an overloaded footer — Google detects and devalues them.

What to do with deep pages that cannot be moved up?

Strengthen their contextual internal linking. If a page naturally remains 5 clicks deep, compensate by multiplying links from intermediate authority pages, using descriptive anchors, and creating coherent semantic clusters. A well-linked page from 10 level 2-3 pages can recover enough authority to compensate for its depth.

Another lever: the intrinsic quality of the content. A deep but ultra-complete page, with visuals, exclusive data, and natural backlinks, can outperform weak superficial pages. Invest in editorial depth, not just click depth. And monitor engagement metrics: if Google sees that users spend time interacting, the quality signal compensates.

What mistakes should absolutely be avoided?

Do not pull all your pages to level 1 under the pretext of reducing depth. You will dilute authority, overwhelm navigation, and send a signal of disorganization to Google. Prioritize: only your 20-30 most strategic pages deserve prime placement. The rest should follow a logical hierarchy.

Avoid also non-crawlable JavaScript links or poorly implemented mega-menus. If Google cannot easily follow your links, actual depth remains high even if everything seems accessible visually. Test with Fetch as Google and ensure your links are properly discovered. Finally, never neglect the loading time of deep pages: a slow page, even well-placed, loses performance.

  • Audit the crawl depth of all strategic pages with a dedicated tool
  • Identify priority pages (traffic, conversions, keywords) that are buried deeper than 3 clicks
  • Elevate these pages via navigation, menus, homepage blocks, or thematic hub pages
  • Strengthen the contextual internal linking of pages that remain deep
  • Ensure all links are crawlable (no blocking JavaScript, no orphan links)
  • Invest in the quality of deep pages to compensate through relevance and engagement
The depth of pages is a concrete SEO lever, but not a fatality. A well-thought-out architecture, solid internal linking, and impeccable content quality can compensate for structural constraints. These optimizations require a fine analysis of your site and a tailored strategy — if complexity seems difficult to manage alone, partnering with a specialized SEO agency can accelerate implementation and secure results.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

À partir de combien de clics une page est-elle considérée comme trop profonde par Google ?
Google ne communique pas de seuil précis. L'expérience terrain montre qu'au-delà de 3-4 clics depuis la homepage, le poids SEO diminue progressivement sur des sites de taille moyenne. Sur les gros sites d'autorité, ce seuil peut être plus élevé.
Une page profonde peut-elle quand même bien ranker malgré son niveau d'enfouissement ?
Oui, absolument. Si elle dispose de backlinks de qualité, d'un excellent contenu, d'un bon maillage interne et qu'elle cible une requête peu concurrentielle, elle peut parfaitement dominer la SERP. La profondeur est un facteur parmi d'autres, pas un critère absolu.
Faut-il remonter toutes mes pages importantes en niveau 1 de navigation ?
Non, c'est contre-productif. Remonter artificiellement toutes les pages dilue l'autorité et crée de la confusion. Priorisez vos 20-30 pages stratégiques et gardez une hiérarchie logique pour le reste. La cohérence éditoriale prime sur le gaming du nombre de clics.
Le maillage interne peut-il compenser la profondeur d'une page ?
Oui, en partie. Une page enfouie mais fortement maillée depuis des pages d'autorité intermédiaire peut récupérer suffisamment de PageRank interne pour compenser. Utilisez des ancres descriptives et créez des clusters sémantiques cohérents.
La profondeur d'URL (nombre de slashes) a-t-elle un impact direct sur le SEO ?
Non, ce qui compte c'est le nombre de clics réels dans la navigation, pas la structure d'URL. Une page accessible en 2 clics mais avec une URL longue sera mieux traitée qu'une page à URL courte mais enfouie à 6 clics de la home.
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