Official statement
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- 8:27 Is user experience really enough to bypass Panda?
- 10:11 Is it really necessary to change a page's content with every visit to improve rankings?
- 11:00 Do 301 redirects really transfer all SEO signals to the new URL?
- 11:04 Do 301 redirects really transfer all the SEO signals to the new URL?
- 11:38 Do internal links placed at the bottom of the page lose their SEO value?
- 13:41 What causes the Knowledge Graph to disappear after a site restructuring?
- 16:19 Why is Google pushing for JavaScript, mobile, and structured data all at once?
- 16:21 Could JavaScript rendering really undermine your visibility on Google?
- 19:05 Is your mobile site really on par with your desktop version?
- 19:33 Should you really redirect permanently out-of-stock products to alternatives?
- 23:31 Why are canonical tags critical for your multilingual sites?
- 23:53 How can you handle the canonicalization of multilingual sites without losing your international traffic?
- 25:40 How does Google really handle duplicate content on your site?
- 28:36 How can you effectively report duplicated content to Google?
- 29:29 Is internal duplicate content really a problem for your SEO?
- 33:30 Does infinite scrolling really harm your SEO?
- 34:52 Should you keep product pages for out-of-stock items indexed or remove them?
- 37:36 Does the placement of internal links on the page really affect Google rankings?
- 46:05 How can you prevent Google from confusing two sites with similar content?
- 46:30 Does Google really rewrite your meta descriptions the way it wants?
- 47:04 Is it true that Search Console hides some of your traffic data?
- 49:34 Do links in PDFs pass PageRank and improve rankings?
- 54:47 Does Google really use readability scores to rank your content?
- 55:23 Can mobile page speed truly boost your rankings?
- 55:29 Is mobile speed really a key ranking factor for Google?
- 179:16 Do structured data really influence Google rankings?
Google recommends never deleting the URLs of products that are permanently withdrawn, but rather redirecting them to a similar product or transforming the page while keeping the URL. The goal is to preserve accumulated SEO signals (backlinks, authority, crawl history). For SEO, this means systematically auditing the lifecycle of product listings and implementing a strategy for managing permanent withdrawals, rather than allowing 404 errors to proliferate.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize keeping URLs for permanently withdrawn products?
URLs accumulate quality signals over time: natural backlinks, topical authority, click history in the SERPs, and age in the index. When a product is withdrawn from the catalog, these signals do not disappear instantly.
Deleting the URL or returning a 404/410 means abandoning this SEO capital. Google loses the connection between the old authority and the rest of the site. Backlinks pointing to this page become dead ends for PageRank, and users arriving via old SERPs encounter an error.
What’s the difference between redirecting and keeping the URL while updating the content?
A 301 redirect to a similar product transfers most signals to the new URL. Google sees that the page has definitively moved. This approach works well when there is an obvious replacement product, almost equivalent in terms of user intent.
Keeping the URL and transforming the content (to a category page, comparison, buying guide, or suggestions for alternative products) allows you to maintain the SEO anchor intact. All backlinks continue to point to the same URL, and Google can keep the complete history of the page in its graph.
Does this recommendation apply to all types of e-commerce sites?
The answer varies depending on the catalog turnover rate. A fashion site with quick seasonal collections will not have the same strategy as a B2B site selling industrial equipment with a long lifecycle.
For high-rotation catalogs, transforming each obsolete product listing into an alternative page can quickly become unmanageable. In this case, redirecting to a category or an equivalent product remains the most scalable solution. The key is to avoid wild 404 errors on URLs that carry SEO weight.
- Regularly audit removed product URLs to identify those that have backlinks or residual traffic
- Redirect with a 301 to the closest replacement product if the equivalence is clear
- Keep and transform URLs with high SEO capital into editorial pages (guides, comparisons, alternative lists)
- Never leave a URL in 404 if it still receives organic traffic or has quality backlinks
- Document the strategy for managing permanent withdrawals in an internal process to avoid anarchic decisions
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes, and the data confirms it. Field tests show that a well-chosen 301 redirect transfers between 85 and 95% of the authority of the source URL, depending on the relevance of the target. A retained URL with transformed content maintains 100% of its history, but requires significant editorial effort.
The problem arises when e-commerce teams massively delete products without consulting SEO. This leads to sharp drops in organic traffic across entire segments simply because dozens of URLs with backlinks have turned into 404 errors overnight.
What nuances should be added to this generic recommendation?
Google does not specify the SEO quality threshold at which it becomes beneficial to keep or redirect a URL. A product listing without backlinks, without traffic, with 3 visits in 12 months can easily go 404 or 410 without measurable impact.
The real question is: how many backlinks, what level of residual traffic, and what historical positioning should trigger the conservation strategy? [To be verified] on each catalog, as there are no universal rules. The arbitration must be done on a case-by-case basis, URL by URL for the most strategic ones.
Another point: Google speaks of "similar product" without defining what “similar” means in terms of user intent. Redirecting an iPhone 12 to an iPhone 15? To a smartphone comparison? To the iPhone category? Each choice has different implications for user experience and signal preservation.
In what cases does this rule not apply or become counterproductive?
When the catalog has thousands of fast-moving references, wanting to manage each permanent withdrawal manually becomes operationally unrealistic. Fashion pure players, for example, may remove 40% of their catalog each season.
In this context, an automated redirect strategy to the parent category or an algorithm for suggesting similar products is more scalable. Transforming each listing into editorial content is simply not viable without a dedicated team.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should be taken to manage permanent withdrawals?
Establish an inter-team process between merchandising, tech, and SEO. Before withdrawing a product, identify the URLs of SEO stakes (backlinks, traffic, historical positioning). A simple monthly export of removed products cross-referenced with Search Console and Ahrefs data is enough to detect priorities.
For URLs with high capital, there are two options: redirect to the most relevant replacement product (same category, same use, similar price) or transform the page into alternative content (buying guide, comparison of equivalent products, page “Products similar to [removed product name]”).
What mistakes should be avoided when managing redirects for removed products?
Never redirect massively to the homepage or to a category that is too generic. Google interprets this type of redirect as a soft 404 if the target page has no relation to the initial intent. Users searching for “Nike Air Zoom 38 running shoes” who land on “All our shoes” will have a frustrating experience, and Google detects that.
Avoid also temporary redirects in 302 for permanent withdrawals. A 302 signals to Google that the page will return, keeping the source URL in the index and delaying the transfer of signals. For a permanent withdrawal, always use a 301.
How to audit and prioritize URLs for removed products?
Extract the list of 404 URLs from Search Console each quarter. Cross-reference with your backlink data (Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush) to identify those that still receive incoming links. Then filter by residual traffic: a URL that still generates 50 visits/month deserves immediate attention.
Rank the URLs by priority score: number of backlinks × average DR of referring domains + monthly residual traffic. Treat the top 20% as a priority, the rest can follow an automated redirect process to the parent category if no equivalent product exists.
- Monthly audit of removed products from the catalog and cross-reference with SEO data (backlinks, traffic)
- Redirect with a 301 to a similar product when the equivalence is clear and user intent is preserved
- Transform URLs with high SEO capital without equivalents into editorial pages (guides, comparisons, suggestions)
- Document each redirect decision to avoid chains and facilitate future maintenance
- Never redirect massively to the homepage or a category that is too generic (risk of soft 404)
- Use only 301 redirects for permanent withdrawals, never 302
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Faut-il rediriger un produit retiré vers la catégorie parente ou vers un produit similaire ?
Une redirection 301 transfère-t-elle 100 % du PageRank de l'URL source ?
Peut-on supprimer en 404 une fiche produit sans backlinks ni trafic ?
Combien de temps faut-il maintenir une redirection 301 après le retrait d'un produit ?
Que faire des URLs de produits retirés qui génèrent encore du trafic organique mais n'ont plus d'équivalent ?
🎥 From the same video 26
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 23/01/2018
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