What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 3 questions

Less than 30 seconds. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~30s 🎯 3 questions 📚 SEO Google

Official statement

If a crawl tool cannot complete the exploration of a website because of redirect chains, Google won't be able to do it either. Google will simply give up and explore elsewhere rather than persist with a site that presents chained redirects.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 29/11/2022 ✂ 11 statements
Watch on YouTube →
Other statements from this video 10
  1. Pourquoi l'écart entre URLs découvertes et indexées révèle-t-il des problèmes critiques ?
  2. Pourquoi les problèmes d'indexation se concentrent-ils sur certains dossiers de votre site ?
  3. Le no-index libère-t-il vraiment du crawl budget pour les pages importantes ?
  4. Les chaînes de redirections tuent-elles vraiment l'expérience utilisateur ?
  5. Faut-il vraiment supprimer toutes les redirections internes de votre site ?
  6. Pourquoi Google ralentit-il son crawl quand votre serveur faiblit ?
  7. L'instabilité serveur peut-elle vraiment déclasser votre site dans Google ?
  8. Faut-il vraiment multiplier les outils de crawl pour diagnostiquer efficacement vos problèmes SEO ?
  9. Pourquoi faut-il détecter les erreurs techniques avant que Google ne les trouve ?
  10. Les Developer Tools du navigateur suffisent-ils vraiment pour auditer vos redirections SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (3 years ago)
TL;DR

Google simply abandons exploring a website if redirect chains slow down its crawl too much. In other words: too many cascading 301s, and Googlebot moves on. The direct consequence? Entire sections of your site may never be indexed.

What you need to understand

Crystal Carter is crystal clear: Google doesn't insist on a site presenting complex redirect chains. If the crawler encounters too many successive jumps (A → B → C → D), it gives up and redistributes its crawl budget elsewhere.

This statement confirms what many have already suspected in the field: crawl time is not infinite, and Googlebot optimizes its resources. A site that multiplies chained redirects shoots itself in the foot.

What exactly is a redirect chain?

We speak of a chain when one URL redirects to a second URL, which itself redirects to a third, or even a fourth. Classic example: old-url.com/page → new-url.com/page → new-url.com/en/page → new-url.com/en/final-page.

Google generally tolerates 1 to 2 jumps, but beyond that, the risk of abandonment increases significantly. And it's not just a theoretical question — professional crawl tools encounter exactly the same limitations.

Why does Google give up rather than persist?

Crawl budget is a limited resource. Google cannot spend hours following redirects in loops on a single site when millions of other pages are waiting to be explored.

If your site forces Googlebot to consume its time on unnecessary redirects, it simply considers that you're not facilitating its work. Result: it will return less frequently, explore fewer pages, and your indexation will suffer directly.

What are the concrete impacts on indexation?

The consequences are multiple and measurable. First, valid pages will never be indexed — even if they are technically accessible, Googlebot will have given up before reaching them.

Next, the refresh rate of your content will slow down. An important update risks taking weeks to be accounted for if it sits at the end of a redirect chain. Finally, your overall crawl budget decreases: Google redistributes its time differently and indirectly penalizes you.

  • Google abandons exploration when redirect chains slow crawl too much
  • A chain is defined by successive redirects (A → B → C → D...)
  • Beyond 2 jumps, the risk of abandonment becomes significant
  • Direct impact: unindexed pages, slow refresh, wasted crawl budget
  • Third-party crawl tools encounter exactly the same limitations as Googlebot

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement really reflect what we observe in the field?

Yes, and it's even an understatement. In audits of large-scale websites, we regularly find that entire sections are never crawled because of poorly managed redirects. Server logs confirm it: Googlebot follows 1, sometimes 2 redirects, then disappears.

What's missing from Crystal Carter's statement is the precise limit: how many jumps exactly? 3? 5? Google remains deliberately vague. [To verify] with your own tests, because this tolerance likely varies depending on the "trust" Google grants your site (internal PageRank, crawl history, etc.).

Are all types of redirects affected the same way?

No, and this is an important distinction. 301 (permanent) and 302 (temporary) redirects are not treated identically by Google. In theory, a 301 should signal "this page has permanently moved, update your index," while a 302 says "check back later."

In practice, a chain of 302s is even worse than a chain of 301s: Googlebot must regularly come back to verify if the temporary redirect has changed. Result: crawl budget massacred. And if you mix 301s, 302s, and even 307s in the same chain? You're signing the death warrant for your crawl.

Are there cases where Google tolerates more jumps?

Honestly? Unlikely. Some SEOs claim that "authoritative" sites would benefit from greater leeway, but [To verify] — no official data supports this hypothesis.

What we know for certain: even a powerful site wastes crawl budget with chained redirects. You can have 10 million backlinks, but if Googlebot spends 80% of its time following your redirects, it will explore fewer useful pages. The "tolerance" is a dangerous myth.

Caution: JavaScript redirects or meta-refresh are not even counted as real redirects by Google — they consume even more resources and slow crawl exponentially. Absolutely avoid using them in a chain context.

Practical impact and recommendations

How do you identify redirect chains on your site?

First step: crawl your site with a dedicated tool (Screaming Frog, OnCrawl, Botify, etc.). Configure it to follow all redirects and generate a specific report on detected chains.

Then analyze your server logs. You'll see exactly where Googlebot gives up. If you notice that certain sections receive zero Googlebot visits even though they're linked from your navigation, look for upstream redirects. Often, the problem comes from a poorly cleaned migration or a CMS change that stacked layers.

What corrective actions should you implement immediately?

Simplify your redirects so they point directly to the final destination. If you have A → B → C, modify A so it redirects directly to C. Same for B if it's still referenced somewhere.

Review your migration history. Each redesign leaves traces: old URLs that redirect to temporary URLs, which themselves redirect to the current version. Clean all of that up. And update your internal links so they point directly to final URLs — never rely on a redirect to "catch" a misconfigured link.

What errors must you absolutely avoid?

Never leave a 302 redirect in place if the change is permanent. Google will eventually treat it as a 301, but in the meantime, you're losing time and crawl budget.

Avoid circular redirects (A → B → A) or loops (A → B → C → A). They crash crawlers and give a catastrophic image of your site. And above all, don't create new chains during migrations: always map the old URL to the new final URL, not to an intermediate URL.

  • Crawl your site with a professional tool to map all redirects
  • Analyze server logs to find where Googlebot abandons
  • Simplify each chain so it points directly to the final destination
  • Update internal links to avoid triggering unnecessary redirects
  • Replace all 302s with 301s if changes are permanent
  • Verify that no loops or circular redirects exist
  • Clean up migration history to remove successive layers of redirects
Redirect chains are not just a matter of "best practices" — they directly impact your ability to be indexed. In-depth technical auditing allows you to identify them, but their correction can be complex depending on the site's history and technical architecture. If you manage a site with multiple migrations or heavy technical structure, bringing in a specialized SEO agency will allow you to resolve these issues methodically and avoid new errors during future evolutions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de redirections en chaîne Google tolère-t-il avant d'abandonner ?
Google ne communique pas de chiffre officiel, mais les observations terrain montrent qu'au-delà de 2 à 3 sauts, le risque d'abandon devient très élevé. La tolérance varie probablement selon l'autorité et l'historique de crawl du site.
Les redirections 301 et 302 ont-elles le même impact sur le crawl ?
Non. Une chaîne de 302 (redirections temporaires) consomme plus de budget de crawl car Googlebot doit revenir vérifier régulièrement si la redirection a changé. Une 301 signale un changement permanent et est mieux gérée, mais reste problématique en chaîne.
Un site avec beaucoup d'autorité peut-il se permettre plus de redirections en chaîne ?
Aucune donnée officielle ne le confirme. Même un site puissant gaspille du crawl budget avec des redirections successives. L'autorité peut augmenter la fréquence de crawl, mais pas la tolérance aux chaînes.
Comment vérifier si Google abandonne le crawl de certaines pages à cause de redirections ?
Analysez vos logs serveur pour voir où Googlebot s'arrête. Complétez avec un crawl complet de votre site via un outil professionnel pour identifier toutes les chaînes de redirections existantes.
Dois-je corriger en priorité les chaînes de redirections ou d'autres problèmes techniques ?
Les chaînes de redirections doivent être traitées rapidement car elles empêchent l'indexation de pages entières. Elles passent avant des optimisations fines comme le maillage interne ou les balises meta, mais après les erreurs bloquantes type 404 massives ou robots.txt mal configuré.
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Redirects

🎥 From the same video 10

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 29/11/2022

🎥 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.