Official statement
Other statements from this video 1 ▾
Google does not provide examples of toxic links in responses to reconsideration requests — the answer is limited to a straightforward acceptance or rejection. To identify problematic backlinks, it's better to consult webmaster forums or use third-party tools. This position forces SEOs to audit their own link profiles before any request, without a safety net.
What you need to understand
Why does Google refuse to provide concrete examples?
The reconsideration process does not operate as a constructive exchange. Google handles requests in a binary manner: either your backlink cleanup is considered sufficient, or it is not. That's the end of the story.
This minimalist approach is explained by the volume of requests processed daily. Providing a personalized analysis of each toxic link profile would require considerable human resources. The spam team at Google prefers to focus its efforts on algorithmic detection rather than manual guidance for webmasters.
What does a reconsideration response actually contain?
The message received is standardized and is limited to two scenarios: either approval of the penalty lift or a rejection with a generic text inviting further cleanup. No details on specific links causing issues, no percentage of progress, no quantitative indication.
If your request is denied, you return to total darkness. This is a frustrating approach that forces SEOs to guess which links remain problematic based only on their own analysis.
Where can you find help to identify toxic links?
Google directs to the official Webmaster Central forums, where other professionals can provide feedback on a link profile. The idea is that the SEO community collectively possesses the necessary experience to spot suspicious patterns.
In practice, posting a sample of links in these forums sometimes results in relevant feedback. However, the quality of responses varies greatly depending on who participates, and many regular contributors have left these spaces over the years.
- Reconsideration requests generate only yes/no responses, without details on remaining problematic links.
- Google directs users to community forums for assistance in identifying bad backlinks.
- This position forces a comprehensive prior audit using third-party tools and thorough manual analysis.
- Each denial requires a complete new iteration of the cleanup process without indication of progress.
- The volume of requests processed justifies this minimalist approach from Google's perspective, not yours.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this position consistent with what we observe in the field?
Absolutely. Reconsideration feedback has indeed been a black box for years. Every SEO who has managed a manual penalty has experienced this frustration: you clean up 500 links, submit, get a generic rejection, and start over.
The problem is that this approach creates a total information asymmetry. Google knows exactly which links are problematic but refuses to share that information. As a result, some sites end up disavowing hundreds of domains out of caution, potentially including neutral or slightly positive links.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
Webmaster forums are not what they used to be. Activity has declined significantly, and many historical Top Contributors no longer participate actively. Relying solely on this resource in 2025 is a risky bet.
Furthermore, [To be verified]: there is no guarantee that forum contributors apply the same criteria as Google's spam team. Their feedback is subjective and based on their own experiences, not on access to Google’s internal data.
In what situations does this logic show its limits?
For sites with a massive link history — thousands of backlinks accumulated over 10-15 years — the lack of precise guidance turns cleanup into an impossible mission. You can spend weeks auditing without ever being sure you've identified all toxic signals.
Another problematic situation: penalties inherited from a previous unscrupulous SEO agency. The new site owner has to manage links whose origins they do not know, without documentation and without access to past link-building campaigns. Google won’t make any exceptions for that.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do before submitting a reconsideration request?
Export your entire link profile via Google Search Console and cross-check this data with at least two third-party tools (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush). Each tool has its own link database, and the combination allows for spotting backlinks that are invisible in just one index.
Then, manually categorize the links by type: spammy forums, low-quality directories, automated blog comments, suspicious PBN site networks, legitimate editorial links. This classification takes time but is essential. No algorithm will replace your human judgment on certain borderline cases.
What mistakes should be avoided during the cleanup process?
Don't blindly disavow all links with low Domain Authority. Some small niche sites may host perfectly natural and relevant links. Toxicity cannot be measured solely by authority metrics.
Another common pitfall: writing a reconsideration request that is too brief or generic. Google expects a detailed account of your concrete actions — number of domains contacted for removal, number of links disavowed, method used to identify issues. A sloppy request = automatic rejection.
How can you maximize your chances of acceptance?
Document every step in a spreadsheet: URL of the toxic link, referring domain, date of webmaster contact, response received (or no response), date added to the disavow file. This traceability shows Google that you have taken the job seriously.
In the reconsideration request itself, be factual and humble. No bogus excuses or emotional pleas. Explain what happened, what you did to correct it, and commit to adhering to the guidelines in the future. The tone matters just as much as the content.
- Export and cross-check backlink data from Search Console + at least 2 third-party tools.
- Manually categorize each suspicious link (forums, directories, PBNs, automated comments).
- Contact webmasters for removal before proceeding to systematic disavow.
- Document all actions in a timestamped traceability spreadsheet.
- Write a factual reconsideration request with precise quantitative details (X domains contacted, Y links disavowed).
- Never submit a rushed request — wait until at least 80% of identified toxic links have been cleaned.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il attendre entre deux demandes de réexamen après un refus ?
Le fichier disavow suffit-il ou faut-il vraiment contacter les webmasters ?
Peut-on soumettre plusieurs demandes de réexamen pour différentes pénalités simultanément ?
Les outils tiers donnent-ils des scores de toxicité fiables ?
Faut-il désavouer les liens d'anciens communiqués de presse distribués massivement ?
🎥 From the same video 1
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 15/07/2013
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.