What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

For rich snippets to show up, the site must have quality content, the markup must be technically correct, and comply with Google's policies. Low site quality can prevent the display of rich snippets.
33:34
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 52:44 💬 EN 📅 31/05/2016 ✂ 13 statements
Watch on YouTube (33:34) →
Other statements from this video 12
  1. 3:40 Comment Google ajuste-t-il son crawl en fonction de votre serveur ?
  2. 6:00 Le contenu dupliqué peut-il vraiment saborder votre crawl budget ?
  3. 7:21 Mobile-friendly suffit-il vraiment pour le SEO mobile ?
  4. 18:31 Le hreflang fonctionne-t-il vraiment entre URLs non-canoniques ?
  5. 21:12 Remplacer des underscores par des tirets dans vos URLs peut-il déstabiliser vos positions Google ?
  6. 31:05 Faut-il vraiment arrêter le link building pour ranker sur Google ?
  7. 31:28 Pourquoi un changement de domaine sans redirection peut-il anéantir votre référencement ?
  8. 32:16 La vitesse du site impacte-t-elle vraiment le classement Google ?
  9. 37:02 Pourquoi vos liens Ajax peuvent-ils saboter votre crawl budget ?
  10. 42:45 Pourquoi votre proposition de valeur unique peut-elle influencer votre classement Google ?
  11. 47:43 Sous-domaines ou sous-répertoires : quelle architecture privilégier pour votre SEO ?
  12. 49:06 Faut-il vraiment surveiller ses backlinks en permanence ?
📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google requires three cumulative criteria for rich snippets to appear: overall site quality, technical conformity of the markup, and adherence to its policies. A site deemed low quality will have its rich snippets denied, even with perfect schema.org implementation. This statement confirms that structured data is not an inherent right but a privilege granted to sites meeting Google's quality criteria.

What you need to understand

Does Google filter the display of rich snippets based on site quality?

Yes, and that is the nuance of this statement. A technically flawless schema.org markup does not guarantee the appearance of rich snippets in search results. Google applies a quality filter upstream.

This filter assesses the overall quality of the site, not just the page containing the structured data. A site with a dubious link profile, poor content, or weak engagement signals may see its rich snippets consistently blocked. Compliance with Google's policies particularly covers fake reviews, misleading prices, or promotional content disguised as structured data.

What specific criteria does Google evaluate to allow rich snippets?

Google remains deliberately vague about precise metrics. The term "site quality" likely encompasses E-E-A-T signals, ad density, history of manual penalties, and semantic consistency between visible content and the markup.

Technical conformity requires that the schema.org vocabulary used exactly matches the type of content presented. Marking up a promotional article as Article when it falls under Product, for instance, constitutes a violation that could result in blocking. Google's policies explicitly prohibit certain practices like adding auto-generated reviews or fake prices to artificially enhance snippets.

Can a site lose its rich snippets after obtaining them?

Absolutely. Rich snippets are not a permanent state. A perceived decline in quality by Google may lead to their gradual or sudden removal.

This often occurs after a Core algorithm update, a surge of toxic backlinks, or an editorial change that pushes the site below the quality threshold. Continuous monitoring via Google Search Console becomes essential to detect any loss of rich results and diagnose the underlying cause.

  • Overall site quality: a blocking criterion even with perfect markup
  • Compliance with policies: misleading or promotional disguised content is excluded
  • Technical validation: the schema.org vocabulary must exactly match the visible content
  • Revocability: rich snippets can disappear due to a decline in perceived quality
  • Opacity of thresholds: Google does not communicate any quantified metrics for quality filtering

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement truly explain the cases of missing rich snippets observed in practice?

Partially only. In practice, we regularly observe sites of impeccable quality, with markup validated by Google’s testing tool, that never obtain rich snippets. Conversely, some sites with a questionable link profile and average content showcase enhanced snippets.

This inconsistency suggests that the quality filter is not binary but probabilistic, with variable thresholds depending on sectors and types of rich results. The ambiguity maintained by Google regarding precise criteria makes systematic optimization impossible. [To be verified]: the hypothesis that the volume of searches on a brand influences the allowance of rich snippets has never been officially confirmed, but practical observations indicate so.

Is the "site quality" criterion measured by the same algorithms as ranking?

Probably not exactly the same, but with significant overlap. A site well-positioned on its strategic queries statistically has a higher chance of obtaining rich snippets, suggesting a sharing of common signals.

However, sites in positions 1-3 sometimes lose their enhanced snippets without losing their ranking, indicating an additional filtering system specific to rich results. Excessive ad density, for instance, can block rich snippets without impacting traditional organic positioning.

In what cases does this quality filter become a real problem for SEOs?

The most frustrating case involves recent or redesigned e-commerce sites. Even with a clean catalog, detailed product sheets, and impeccable Product/Offer markup, the lack of history and trust signals prevents the display of prices and availability in SERPs for months.

This entry barrier creates a structural competitive advantage for established players, who retain their rich snippets by inertia while newcomers must first prove their legitimacy. For review or comparison sites, the filter becomes quite prohibitive: Google applies a level of scrutiny close to paranoia, blocking 80% of even legitimate attempts to display stars.

Caution: do not multiply the types of markup on the same page hoping to force the display. Google interprets this accumulation as an attempt to manipulate and may blacklist all structured data from the site.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I diagnose why my rich snippets are not appearing?

Start by eliminating obvious technical causes. Use Google’s Rich Results Test to check that your markup is detected and free of critical errors. Then check in Search Console, under the Enhancements section, if your pages are validated but not displayed.

If the markup is technically correct but rich snippets are absent, the issue likely arises from the quality filter. Analyze your link profile with Ahrefs or Majestic: an unfavorable ratio of toxic to healthy links may be sufficient to block enhanced snippets. Also examine your Core Web Vitals and bounce rate: catastrophic engagement signals weigh heavily in quality evaluation.

What mistakes systematically block the display of rich snippets?

The first mistake is to mark up invisible or hidden content in accordions closed by default. Google tolerates the markup of collapsible content only if it is accessible with one click without complex interaction.

The second frequent mistake: using Review or AggregateRating markup on product pages without real and verifiable customer reviews. Google now cross-references this data with other sources and detects fake or self-assigned ratings. The third trap: marking up promotional content as Article when it clearly falls under product or commercial offer.

What strategy should I adopt to maximize my chances of obtaining rich snippets?

First, focus your efforts on improving overall quality signals: cleaning up the link profile, optimizing user experience, and enhancing the editorial quality of strategic pages. Rich snippets will come as a result, not as an isolated objective.

Prioritize the types of rich results that are less sensitive to the quality filter: Breadcrumb, FAQ, HowTo are much easier to pass than Review, Event, or Product. Test these markups first before investing time in the more competitive ones. For e-commerce sites, meticulously document the source of your customer reviews and implement a transparent and traceable collection system.

  • Technically validate the markup with Rich Results Test and Search Console
  • Audit the link profile and disavow identified toxic domains
  • Ensure that the marked-up content is visible without complex interaction
  • Implement Breadcrumb and FAQ first before Product or Review
  • Document the source of customer reviews with timestamping and traceability
  • Monitor the appearance/disappearance of rich snippets through a daily SERP tracking tool
The display of rich snippets depends as much on the overall reputation of the site as on the technical conformity of the markup. New sites or those with problematic histories must first stabilize their fundamentals before hoping for enhanced snippets. These cross-optimizations between technique, content, and link building require specialized expertise and constant monitoring. For organizations without dedicated SEO resources in-house, support from a specialized agency can quickly identify specific blockages and prioritize corrective actions based on their actual impact on eligibility for rich results.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site pénalisé manuellement peut-il quand même afficher des rich snippets ?
Non. Une pénalité manuelle bloque systématiquement l'affichage de tous les types de rich snippets, même si le balisage est techniquement correct. Le déblocage nécessite la levée complète de la pénalité et un délai de réévaluation variable.
Les rich snippets influencent-ils directement le positionnement dans les résultats classiques ?
Non, les rich snippets n'améliorent pas le ranking organique. Ils augmentent le taux de clic sur une position donnée, ce qui peut indirectement renforcer les signaux d'engagement, mais ne constituent pas un facteur de classement direct.
Combien de temps faut-il attendre après l'implémentation du balisage pour voir apparaître les rich snippets ?
Entre quelques jours et plusieurs semaines selon la fréquence de crawl et la qualité perçue du site. Les sites avec un crawl budget élevé et une bonne réputation obtiennent des rich snippets plus rapidement.
Peut-on perdre ses rich snippets suite à une Core Update sans perdre son positionnement ?
Oui, c'est observé régulièrement. Le filtre qualité pour les rich snippets semble plus strict et volatil que les critères de ranking classiques. Une baisse de qualité perçue peut retirer les extraits enrichis tout en maintenant les positions.
Le balisage schema.org améliore-t-il la compréhension du contenu par Google même sans affichage de rich snippet ?
Google affirme que les données structurées aident à mieux comprendre le contenu indépendamment de leur affichage visible. Cependant, l'impact réel sur le ranking reste marginal et difficile à isoler dans les tests.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Structured Data AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 12

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 31/05/2016

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.