Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:12 PageSpeed Insights suffit-il vraiment pour optimiser vos Core Web Vitals ?
- 3:47 Faut-il vraiment indexer vos pages tag ou les passer en noindex ?
- 34:48 Le maillage interne suffit-il vraiment à faire indexer vos pages ?
- 39:28 Les erreurs 404 pénalisent-elles réellement le référencement naturel ?
- 54:49 Faut-il vraiment surveiller tous vos liens entrants pour protéger votre SEO ?
- 59:10 Le contenu généré automatiquement est-il condamné à disparaître de l'index Google ?
- 60:29 La vitesse de chargement influence-t-elle vraiment le ranking Google ?
- 71:42 Pourquoi Google crawle-t-il vos pages sans jamais les indexer ?
- 91:20 Faut-il vraiment arrêter de suivre chaque mise à jour Google ?
Google recommends keeping seasonal pages active after the event instead of deleting them. The reason: to preserve their accumulated authority and facilitate future reindexing. Deleting and recreating these pages each year complicates crawling and dilutes historical relevance signals.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize keeping seasonal pages live?
Mueller's statement targets a common behavior: deleting pages after the season to recreate them the following year. This pattern creates a recurring indexing issue. Each deletion erases accumulated signals (backlinks, crawl history, user engagement).
When you recreate the page, Google must start everything from scratch: discovery, crawling, quality assessment, crawl budget allocation. This process takes time, sometimes several weeks. For short events (Christmas, sales, Valentine's Day), you lose a significant part of the commercial window.
What does it really mean to “maintain their importance”?
A page's importance builds over several cycles: depth of internal links, URL age, consolidation of backlinks. A page that stays online for 12 months retains its performance history in Core Web Vitals, its historical click-through rate, and its behavioral signals.
Deleting and recreating breaks this continuity. Backlinks point to a 404, then must be rediscovered. Internal PageRank gets dispersed. Users who have bookmarked the URL encounter an error, degrading the overall experience and trust.
Does this rule apply to all types of seasonal content?
Mueller does not distinguish between seasonal editorial content (guides, articles) and seasonal product pages (collections, promotions). The logic holds for both, but there are nuances in implementation.
For a guide titled “Best Christmas Gifts,” keeping the page allows you to update it year after year instead of starting from scratch. For a product collection, the challenge is trickier: what to do when the products are no longer available? The answer is not in this statement, but the general recommendation stands.
- Preserving authority: a permanent URL accumulates signals and trust over several cycles.
- Simplified reindexing: a page that remains online avoids the discovery/crawl/evaluation cycle each season.
- Preserved backlinks: incoming links remain functional and pass their juice year-round.
- User experience: no 404 errors for users returning or who have bookmarked.
- Performance history: Google retains click, CTR, and engagement data over time.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with field observations?
Yes, and case studies confirm it. Sites that keep their seasonal pages active notice a quicker ramp-up as the next season approaches. Pages already indexed, with a positive history, naturally rise in the SERPs without friction.
However, Mueller remains vague on a crucial point: what to do with off-season content? Should we keep the page as is with a note “See you next year”? Should we update it with alternative content? Should we redirect temporarily? This lack of precision creates a gray area for practitioners.
What risks does keeping inactive seasonal pages pose?
Keeping a page without strategy can deteriorate perceived site quality. A “Summer Sale” page visited in December with unavailable products or outdated dates sends a negative signal. Google assesses freshness and contextual relevance.
The real challenge: keeping the page useful and relevant off-season. This involves either updating it with complementary content (“Prepare for the next sales,” “History of the best offers”) or intelligently redirecting to a related page. Mueller does not provide this granularity. [To verify] on sites with a high volume of seasonal pages, this approach can dilute crawl budget if not accompanied by clear prioritization.
In what cases does this rule not strictly apply?
For ultra-occasional events (48-hour flash sales, unique non-recurring events), keeping the page has a different ROI. If the event never returns, keeping the page active is more about archiving than SEO strategy.
Another edge case: sites with thousands of seasonal SKUs (fashion, toys). Keeping all out-of-season product pages can create crawl budget issues and thin content. Here, the strategy should be segmented: keep category and collection pages, but not necessarily every individual product page. Mueller does not address this complexity, which is a gap for large e-commerce sites.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely for existing seasonal pages?
Start with an audit: identify all your seasonal pages (events, promotions, guides). Segment them by type (editorial vs. transactional) and recurrence (annual, occasional). This mapping determines the conservation strategy.
For pages to keep active year-round, prepare an off-season update plan. Add a “Next Edition” section, a history, and complementary content. The goal: ensure an off-season viewed page doesn't seem outdated or abandoned. Remember to adjust meta tags to reflect the temporal context while maintaining semantic coherence.
What mistakes should you avoid in managing seasonal content?
Do not delete pages reflexively after the event. This is the pattern that Mueller directly targets. If you have already deleted seasonal pages in the past, reactivate them with a clean 301 to the new version if the URL has changed, or restore the original URL if possible.
Avoid also leaving seasonal pages in permanent “no-index” off-season. This is almost equivalent to deleting them from Google’s perspective. Prefer to maintain indexing and work on content relevance to justify this ongoing presence. Be cautious of the seasonal duplicate content trap: if you create a new URL each year for the same event, consolidate to a unique canonical URL.
How can you check if your site complies with this recommendation?
Check your Search Console: filter pages by seasonal URL pattern and check their indexing status. If you see recurring cycles of deindexing/reindexing, it's the symptom that Mueller points out.
Analyze the server logs to observe Googlebot's behavior on these off-season pages. If crawling drops drastically, it’s a signal that Google considers them less important. Work on the internal linking structure to maintain their visibility within the architecture. Also, check your backlinks: use Ahrefs or Majestic to identify links pointing to old deleted seasonal pages. Redirect them properly to active pages to recover lost juice.
- Map all seasonal pages (editorial, transactional, recurring, occasional).
- Define an off-season content strategy for each segment (update, redirect, archive).
- Maintain active indexing year-round (avoid temporary no-index).
- Update meta tags and content to remain relevant off-peak.
- Consolidate to a unique URL for recurring events (avoid multiplying annual URLs).
- Monitor Search Console and logs for detecting deindexing cycles.
- Audit backlinks to old seasonal pages and redirect them properly.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je vraiment garder mes pages soldes actives en dehors des périodes de promotion ?
Que faire des pages produits saisonniers quand les stocks sont épuisés ?
Une redirection 301 de l'ancienne page saisonnière vers la nouvelle suffit-elle ?
Comment éviter le duplicate content si je garde plusieurs pages saisonnières similaires ?
Garder des centaines de pages saisonnières actives ne dilue-t-il pas le crawl budget ?
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