Official statement
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Google recommends the rel="nofollow" attribute for outgoing links to external sites, especially in areas where users publish content. The goal is to prevent spammers from abusing your site to gain PageRank. In practice, this directive primarily concerns comments, forums, and user-generated content (UGC), but raises questions about the very definition of a "unreliable" link.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize nofollow for external links?
The Google directive aims to protect the integrity of PageRank in the web ecosystem. When a site allows users to post links without strict moderation, it becomes a prime target for spammers looking to manipulate rankings.
The issue is not new: comment sections, user profiles, and forums have always been vectors for link spam. Google requires webmasters to set a technical barrier via rel="nofollow" so that these links do not pass SEO juice, even if the page hosting them has authority.
This recommendation is part of a logic of editorial responsibility. If you do not manually check every link posted on your site, you need to inform Google that you do not endorse these destinations. Otherwise, you risk being seen as complicit in artificial link schemes.
Which areas of the site are truly affected?
Google explicitly mentions comment sections, but the logic extends to any space where user-generated content (UGC) can be published: forums, Q&A areas, member profiles, participatory directories, internal wikis, and even some poorly secured form fields.
The term "unreliable external links" remains vague. Is a link to Wikipedia reliable? Yes. A link to an unknown blog posted by an anonymous commenter? Not so much. The criterion is not the destination, but the level of editorial control you exert over the link.
Is nofollow enough to protect a site from spam?
No, and this is where many go wrong. Nofollow prevents the transfer of PageRank but does not prevent the indexing of the destination page or the crawling of the link by Googlebot. It's an SEO measure, not a security measure.
A spammer can still use your site to generate traffic, spread malware through trap URLs, or simply pollute your user experience. Nofollow should be accompanied by CAPTCHA, moderation, anti-spam filters, and sometimes even blacklists of URLs or domains.
- Main risk area: comments, forums, UGC profiles
- Recommended technical attribute: rel="nofollow" or rel="ugc" (a variant introduced to clarify usage)
- Nofollow limitation: protects only against the transfer of PageRank, not spam itself
- Editorial responsibility: you implicitly endorse any link without nofollow on your site
- Consequence of untreated abuse: manual or algorithmic penalty for outgoing artificial links
SEO Expert opinion
Is this directive consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, but with an important nuance: since Google has transformed nofollow into a "hint" rather than a strict directive, its effectiveness has become less binary. Previously, a nofollow link transmitted no PageRank. Now, Google reserves the right to interpret it as it sees fit.
In practice, most sites that rigorously apply nofollow on UGC do not suffer penalties related to abusive outgoing links. However, there are also cases where Google ignores nofollow on high-authority sites and still follows certain links, likely to discover new content. [To be verified]: the exact degree of Google's obedience to the nofollow hint remains opaque.
What are the blind spots of this recommendation?
Google does not specify how to handle editorial links to external sources that you deem relevant but not solid enough for a dofollow. Should everything be nofollow by default? No, that would be counterproductive: outgoing links to quality sources enhance the semantic credibility of your content.
The other blind spot concerns affiliate links. Google recommends rel="sponsored" or rel="nofollow", but says nothing about cases where an affiliate link points to a site that is objectively relevant and of high quality. The signal becomes ambiguous: you must mark the link as commercial, but it could also enhance your topical authority if transmitted as dofollow.
Finally, this directive completely ignores grey link exchange contexts: guest posts, editorial partnerships, links inserted into third-party resources. Google says "use nofollow for UGC", but what about semi-controlled content published by external contributors? The line becomes blurry.
Should this rule be applied dogmatically?
No, and this is where on-the-ground experience takes precedence over doctrine. A niche site that manually moderates every comment and checks each link can afford to leave some links as dofollow if the destination provides real value. This is even recommended to encourage quality contributions.
Conversely, a site that receives hundreds of comments per day must automate nofollow by default, possibly allowing some links to become dofollow after manual review. The risk of letting spam slip through outweighs the hypothetical benefit of an additional outgoing link.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely on an existing site?
First step: audit all UGC areas of your site. Identify sections where users can publish links: comments, forums, profiles, directories, public contact forms. Check if these links are already set to nofollow or ugc.
If not, modify the template or CMS to automatically apply rel="ugc" or rel="nofollow" to all links in these areas. WordPress has been doing this by default for years, but many custom CMS or modified themes do not implement it correctly.
How to handle editorial outgoing links without shooting yourself in the foot?
Clearly distinguish controlled editorial content (articles written by your team) from unmoderated user content. In your articles, prioritize dofollow links to quality sources: studies, official data, academic references, authoritative sites in your niche.
For commercial or affiliate links, use rel="sponsored" instead of pure nofollow. Google appreciates transparency and may even favor a site that correctly marks its monetized links. Don't routinely nofollow every outgoing link: this sends a signal of distrust that can harm your semantic credibility.
What mistakes to avoid when implementing nofollow?
Classic mistake: applying nofollow to all outgoing links, including editorial ones, out of fear of "losing juice." This is counterproductive. Google values sites that cite their sources and point to relevant resources. A site that only has internal links and nofollow outgoing looks suspicious.
Another trap: using JavaScript to hide links instead of nofollow. Google crawls JS and may interpret this as an attempt at cloaking. If you want to block a link, do it cleanly with the HTML attribute, not with technical tricks.
- Complete audit of UGC areas: comments, forums, profiles, public forms
- Automatic application of rel="ugc" or rel="nofollow" to all UGC links
- Verification that the CMS/template correctly implements the attribute (inspect the source code)
- Maintain dofollow on editorial links to quality sources
- Use rel="sponsored" for affiliate links and commercial partnerships
- Implement CAPTCHA and anti-spam moderation alongside nofollow
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle est la différence entre rel="nofollow" et rel="ugc" ?
Le nofollow protège-t-il vraiment mon site d'une pénalité pour liens sortants spam ?
Dois-je mettre nofollow sur tous les liens sortants de mes articles éditoriaux ?
Comment vérifier que le nofollow est bien appliqué sur mon site ?
Le nofollow est-il encore efficace depuis que Google l'a transformé en "hint" ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 30/09/2013
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