Official statement
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Google has rolled out a penalty targeting intrusive mobile interstitials, confirming that user experience directly influences rankings. Websites need to review their pop-ups, overlays, and welcome screens to avoid negative impacts. The nuance: not all interstitials are penalized; some formats are tolerated for legal or technical reasons.
What you need to understand
What is a mobile interstitial and why does Google penalize them?
A mobile interstitial refers to any visual element that covers the main content when accessing a page from a smartphone. Google views these overlays as a hindrance to user experience, especially when the screen is already 5-6 inches.
The penalty specifically targets formats that appear immediately after clicking from search results. Google clearly distinguishes between the first access (penalized) and internal navigation where a pop-up may appear after scrolling or interaction.
What types of interstitials are affected by this penalty?
Google targets three main categories: pop-ups that conceal all content upon loading, standalone interstitials that must be closed to access the page, and misleading layouts where the visible content resembles an interstitial.
Standard app banners in Safari or discreet cookie bars at the top of the page are not subject to penalties. Google also tolerates interstitials required for legal reasons (age verification, GDPR) or private access (paywalls, logins).
How is this penalty technically applied?
The sanction functions as a negative ranking signal at the page level, not the entire domain. If your homepage displays an intrusive pop-up but your articles do not, only the homepage risks degradation.
The impact remains proportional: it is not a brutal de-indexing, but a decrease in mobile visibility that can reach several positions depending on the severity of the intrusion. Google combines this signal with other UX factors like Core Web Vitals.
- Penalized interstitials: full-screen pop-ups upon initial loading, overlays blocking access to content, false layouts mimicking an interstitial
- Tolerated formats: legal cookie banners, age verifications, paywalls, windows appearing after user interaction
- Scope: pages accessible from Google mobile, penalized individually and not at the domain level
- Measurable impact: gradual decline in mobile rankings combined with other UX signals like CLS or loading time
- Automatic detection: analysis of the DOM upon initial loading, measurement of obscured viewport, distinction between direct SERP access and internal navigation
SEO Expert opinion
Is this penalty truly enforced systematically?
In practice, enforcement remains uneven across sectors. E-commerce sites with aggressive promotional pop-ups sometimes continue to rank well, especially when their domain authority compensates for the negative signal. [To verify]: Google has never disclosed the exact weight of this signal in the overall algorithm.
However, A/B tests show a clear correlation: removing an intrusive mobile interstitial often leads to a boost in visibility within 2-4 weeks. The impact varies depending on competition: in highly competitive queries, this signal can shift a position from 4 to 8.
What ambiguities remain in Google's definition?
The line between a “tolerated” interstitial and a “penalized” one remains blurred for certain formats. Discreet slide-ins occupying 20-30% of the screen are not formally classified. Google states that it conceals “the essential content,” without specifying a precise percentage threshold.
Another grey area: interstitials triggered after 5-10 seconds of reading. Technically, this is no longer “immediate,” but if the user has not scrolled, the experience remains degraded. Google does not document this case, leaving SEOs in approximation.
In what contexts does this rule become counterproductive?
For high-conversion sites (SaaS, lead generation), removing all interstitials can drastically reduce email capture rates. The dilemma is real: maintain rankings or maximize immediate conversions?
Some players opt for direct revenue, accepting a loss in organic positions. Others segment: interstitial on paid traffic, clean experience on organic. The decision leans more towards business strategy than pure SEO dogma.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize when auditing your mobile site?
Start by crawling your site with a mobile user-agent and capture the first few seconds of loading. Use tools like Screaming Frog combined with a headless browser to detect JavaScript overlays that appear post-render.
Pay special attention to high organic mobile traffic pages: homepage, main categories, top articles. These are the ones that experience the most visible impact in case of a penalty. Compare mobile vs. desktop performance in Search Console to spot discrepancies in CTR or average position.
How can you adapt existing interstitials without killing conversions?
Replace full-screen pop-ups with discreet formats: sticky banners at the bottom of the page, side slide-ins occupying 25% of the viewport, or native push notifications. These options maintain message visibility without blocking access to content.
For critical promotional campaigns, trigger interstitials only on exit intent or after significant scrolling (50-70% down the page). This way, you keep a conversion contact point while respecting initial content access.
How do you measure the real impact of an interstitial change?
Set up a segmented tracking: isolate organic mobile traffic in Google Analytics, define a reference period pre-modification, then monitor positions, CTR, bounce rates, and conversions over 4-6 weeks post-deployment.
Use Search Console to monitor Core Web Vitals in parallel: a heavy interstitial also impacts CLS and LCP. Correlate ranking variations with UX metrics to determine if the interstitial penalty operates alone or in conjunction with other signals.
- Crawl the site with a mobile user-agent + capture screenshots at loading to identify all overlays
- Map high organic mobile traffic pages and prioritize the audit on these URLs
- Compare positions/CTR mobile vs. desktop in Search Console to detect abnormal discrepancies
- Replace blocking pop-ups with sticky banners, discreet slide-ins, or exit-intent triggers
- Test alternative formats on a sample of pages before global deployment
- Monitor Core Web Vitals (CLS, LCP) in addition to positions to isolate interstitial impact
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les pop-ups cookie sont-ils concernés par cette pénalité Google ?
Un interstitiel qui apparaît après 10 secondes de lecture est-il sanctionné ?
La pénalité impacte-t-elle tout le domaine ou seulement les pages concernées ?
Les bannières d'application mobile natives sont-elles exemptées ?
Comment savoir si mon site a été pénalisé pour interstitiels mobiles ?
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