Official statement
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Google confirms that hreflang errors displayed in Search Console can take time to resolve, even after correction on the site side. This delay is due to the recrawl and reindexing cycle of the affected pages. Specifically, a corrected error may remain visible for several weeks in the interface without negatively impacting SEO, provided that the technical configuration is now valid.
What you need to understand
Why do hreflang errors persist after correction?
The Search Console acts like a mirror of what Googlebot sees during its crawls. When you fix a hreflang error on the server side, this change is only visible in the interface once Google has recrawled all the involved pages in the cross-referencing relationship.
The issue lies in the very nature of hreflang cross-referencing. If your FR page points to your EN page, but the EN page does not yet point back to the FR page, Google will report an error. The correction requires both pages to be crawled after the update, which can take days or weeks depending on your crawl budget and how often Googlebot visits.
What is the difference between a technical error and a display error?
This distinction is crucial. A true technical error occurs when your hreflang setup is broken: missing tag, reference to a 404 page, invalid language code, or incomplete cross-referencing. These errors prevent Google from understanding your multilingual structure and can degrade your international SEO.
A display error in Search Console, however, simply reflects an outdated state of crawl data. Your setup may have been perfectly valid for a week, but Google continues to show the error because not all pages in the hreflang cluster have been recrawled yet. This is an informational lag, not an active SEO problem.
How long should you wait before worrying?
The normal update delay in Search Console ranges from 7 to 21 days for sites that are properly crawled. On massive sites or those with a constrained crawl budget, this delay can stretch to several weeks. Google does not provide a precise SLA, which makes the situation frustrating for SEOs seeking quick confirmations.
If your error persists beyond a month after correction, then yes, you should investigate further. Manually verify with an independent crawler that your hreflang tags are indeed present, that the cross-referencing is complete, and consider forcing a recrawl via the URL inspection tool. But in most cases, patience is the only solution.
- Variable recrawl delay: Google does not crawl all pages at the same frequency
- Mandatory bidirectional cross-referencing: every page in the hreflang cluster must point to all the others
- Search Console shows outdated states: the interface may display errors that have already been corrected
- No immediate SEO impact: an error being resolved in Search Console does not affect ranking if the configuration is technically valid
- Manual validation recommended: use external tools to confirm that your tags are present server-side
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. International SEOs are well aware of this phenomenon of latency between correction and validation in Search Console. I've seen sites where hreflang errors took 6 weeks to disappear after an immediate correction. This problem amplifies on sites with hundreds of language versions, where the complete recrawl of the cluster can take a considerable amount of time.
What is missing from Google's statement is a clear indication of the maximum tolerable delay. Without an official benchmark, it's hard to distinguish a simple technical lag from a real persistent issue. Google leaves SEOs in the dark, leading to unnecessary support tickets and incorrect fixes applied to configurations that are already valid. [To be verified]: no public metrics exist on average resolution times by type of hreflang error.
In what cases does this logic not apply?
If you correct a hreflang error and Google detects it immediately during the next crawl of a page in the cluster, the error should quickly disappear from Search Console. This happens on high crawl frequency pages: homepage, main categories, content updated daily.
Conversely, on deep pages that are rarely visited by Googlebot, the delay can be unusually long. In this case, the persistence of the error reflects a structural crawlability issue rather than a simple informational lag. If your secondary hreflang pages are never recrawled, it might be because your architecture buries them too deeply or your XML sitemap does not list them properly.
What real risks are there if the error lingers for several months?
Let's be honest: if your hreflang error remains displayed for 3 months in Search Console while you've fixed it server-side, the real problem is not the display lag. It's that Google has not recrawled your pages, which potentially means it considers them low priority or inaccessible.
In this scenario, you risk Google not accurately recognizing your multilingual structure, even if it is technically valid. Users could end up on the wrong language version, the duplicate content across domains issue is unmanaged, and your international SEO suffers. The Search Console error then becomes a symptom of a more serious crawl budget or architectural problem.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you verify that the correction is actually applied server-side?
Never rely solely on Search Console to validate a hreflang correction. Use an independent crawler (Screaming Frog, OnCrawl, Sitebulb) to extract the hreflang tags from your pages and verify that the cross-referencing is complete. Inspect the HTML source or HTTP headers to confirm that the tags are present and properly formatted.
Also test with the URL inspection tool in Search Console, which shows the crawled version in real-time by Google. If the hreflang tags appear correctly in this tool but the error persists in reports, it's a simple lag. If they do not appear, your correction is not effective.
What to do if the error persists despite a valid configuration?
First, be patient, then take action. Wait 3 weeks after correction before worrying. If the error is still there after this delay, force the recrawl of all pages in the hreflang cluster via the inspection tool. Also submit your updated XML sitemap to speed up the process.
Monitor the crawl frequency of your multilingual pages in the Search Console statistics. If Google only visits them every two months, the lag is mechanical. In this case, improve their visibility: add internal links, increase their update frequency, or optimize your crawl budget by blocking unnecessary sections.
What errors should you avoid when correcting hreflang?
The classic error is to fix only half of the cross-referencing. You add the missing hreflang tag on the FR page, but forget to update the EN page to point back. Google continues to report an error, and you pull your hair out trying to find the bug.
Another trap: correcting the tags in the HTML but leaving contradictory directives in the sitemap or HTTP headers. Google can crawl multiple sources of hreflang tags, and if they are inconsistent, the error persists. Always check that your correction is applied wherever you declare hreflang.
- Validate corrections with an independent crawler, not just Search Console
- Force the recrawl via the URL inspection tool after corrections
- Check the complete cross-referencing of all pages in the hreflang cluster
- Monitor the crawl frequency of multilingual pages in Search Console stats
- Ensure that XML sitemap, HTML, and HTTP headers are consistent
- Wait 3 to 4 weeks before considering that an error is truly persistent
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps prend en moyenne la disparition d'une erreur hreflang après correction ?
Une erreur hreflang affichée dans Search Console impacte-t-elle mon référencement ?
Comment forcer Google à mettre à jour plus rapidement les données hreflang ?
Dois-je corriger les erreurs hreflang même si elles n'affectent que quelques pages ?
Peut-on avoir des balises hreflang valides côté serveur mais invisibles pour Google ?
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