Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 2:33 Les emojis dans les meta descriptions sont-ils un levier SEO ou un gadget inutile ?
- 5:18 Faut-il vraiment pointer le canonical vers la version desktop en mobile-first ?
- 11:35 Faut-il vraiment corriger toutes les erreurs 404 sur son site ?
- 15:01 Pourquoi les clics totaux dans la Search Console ne correspondent-ils jamais à la somme des clics par requête ?
- 16:58 Les échanges de liens systématiques sont-ils vraiment détectés par les algorithmes de Google ?
- 22:12 Peut-on indexer des pages vides si elles apportent de la valeur utilisateur ?
- 24:10 Faut-il vraiment éviter de réutiliser une URL pour mettre à jour un article Google News ?
- 28:46 Pourquoi Google tarde-t-il autant à reconnaître une balise canonical corrigée ?
- 29:51 Google crawle-t-il vraiment certaines URLs seulement tous les six mois ?
- 31:40 Votre sitemap peut-il vraiment tuer votre crawl budget ?
- 39:47 Faut-il vraiment privilégier le code 410 au 404 pour accélérer le désindexation ?
- 41:14 Google Search Console utilise-t-il une version obsolète de Chrome pour le rendu ?
Google evaluates trust at the site level, not page by page. The absence of rich snippets on certain URLs often stems from algorithmic bugs or technical limitations, without impacting your overall authority. Specifically: a page without visible star ratings or FAQ markup does not signal a penalty — the issue lies elsewhere, and your domain remains intact.
What you need to understand
What exactly is domain trust?
Google calculates an overall trust score by domain name, not by individual URL. This signal aggregates history, backlinks, content quality, user behavior — in short, everything that builds a site's reputation in the eyes of the algorithm.
When Mueller talks about trust evaluated at the site level, he confirms a ground truth: a poorly crafted orphan page does not drag down your entire domain. The opposite is also true — an exemplary page will not save a poor site.
Why do some pages never display rich snippets?
There are two main reasons. First, algorithmic limitations: Google decides when and where to display enhancements based on opaque criteria — relevance of the query, user intent, available structured data deemed non-priority.
Second, technical errors: shaky JSON-LD syntax, incomplete Schema.org markup, contradictions between microdata and visible HTML. The Search Console reports part of these bugs, but not all — some slip under the radar and block display without warning.
Can a site lose all its rich snippets overnight?
Yes, and it's rarely related to a manual penalty. Most of the time, it’s an algorithmic change that reevaluates eligibility criteria — for example, tightening rules on product reviews or HowTo snippets.
The other common scenario: a poorly managed technical migration that breaks structured markup. The domain retains its trust, but Google no longer sees the necessary data to generate enhancements. Result: back to standard organic results, with no loss of overall ranking.
- Trust is measured at the domain level, not page by page — a failing URL does not undermine your overall authority.
- Rich snippets depend on technical and contextual criteria: valid structured data + relevance to the query + Google’s algorithmic choice.
- The absence of enriched snippets does not signal a penalty — it's often a parsing, syntax, or algorithmic priority issue.
- The Search Console only reports a fraction of errors — some markup bugs go unnoticed by Google but block display.
- A global change in display typically indicates an algo update, not a manual sanction — monitor official announcements and SEO forums to correlate.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it confirms what we see every day. Sites with a strong domain authority (high DR, clean backlinks, clean history) sporadically lose rich snippets on certain pages without visible impact on their overall organic traffic.
However, Mueller remains deliberately vague on algorithmic limitations — he doesn’t state *which* criteria trigger the display or masking of snippets. We know Google is continuously testing variations in display based on queries, devices, geographical areas. [To verify]: do some sectors (health, finance) face stricter filters on rich snippets, even with perfect markup?
What nuances should be added to this rule?
First point: domain trust is not binary. Google probably calculates sub-scores by content type — a site can be highly reliable on tech and less credible on health. Therefore, “assessed at the site level” does not mean “a single score for everything.”
Second nuance: Mueller mentions errors “without affecting the entire domain”. OK, but what about the critical threshold? If 80% of your pages have poor markup, will Google continue to trust you? [To verify] — we lack data to affirm that no cumulative effect exists. My hypothesis: beyond a certain volume of errors, even without a manual penalty, the algo downgrades the domain's priority for eligibility to enhancements.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Manual actions are the exception that proves the rule. If your site receives a penalty for spammy structured data (it happens, especially on fake reviews or abusive HowTos), Google can remove *all* your rich snippets at once — and yes, that is indeed a sanction at the domain level.
Another edge case: new sites without a history. Domain trust takes time to build. On a freshly indexed domain, Google is more conservative — even with perfect markup, rich snippets often take weeks to appear. Mueller's rule mainly applies to established sites with an existing reputation.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to diagnose why your rich snippets aren’t displaying?
First step: validate the Schema.org markup using Google's Rich Results Test and third-party tools (Schema Markup Validator, Merkle). Ensure all mandatory properties are present — for an Article, it's headline, image, datePublished, author, publisher.
Next, compare your URLs in the Search Console — Search Appearance section > Rich results. Google will alert you to critical errors, but not always minor warnings that block display. If a page is marked “Valid” but never shows a snippet, it’s probably an algo limit or a contextual filter.
What should you do if your snippets suddenly disappear?
Let's be honest: most of the time, it’s a change on Google’s side, not yours. First, check official announcements (Google Search Central Blog, Danny Sullivan’s Twitter account) — often, an update modifies eligibility criteria without notice.
If nothing has changed on Google’s side, inspect your code. A CMS update, theme change, disabled plugin can break the JSON-LD. Use the URL Inspect tool in the Search Console to see exactly what Googlebot parses — sometimes, the markup is present in your HTML but invisible to the bot (malfunctioning JavaScript, lazy loading, etc.).
Should you panic if some pages lose their enhancements?
No. Mueller is clear: a few pages without snippets are noise, not a red flag. Focus your efforts on strategic pages — those that generate traffic, revenue, and conversions.
However, if *all* your pages lose their snippets at once, that’s a different story. Check for any manual actions in the Search Console. If it’s clean, it’s probably a parsing bug or a temporary algo filter — in that case, fix what can be fixed and wait. Google is constantly recrawling and reevaluating.
- Audit the Schema.org markup with Rich Results Test and a third-party validator — check mandatory properties and warnings.
- Cross-reference Search Console data (Rich Results) with server logs — identify URLs crawled but without snippets displayed.
- Monitor Google announcements after a massive snippet loss — often, it’s an algo update that changes the rules of the game.
- Test display in incognito mode and on different devices — Google personalizes SERPs; what you see is not necessarily what the average user sees.
- Prioritize high ROI pages — don’t waste time on orphan URLs or low-traffic pages.
- Document configuration changes — each CMS update, migration, redesign should include a structured data checklist.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce qu'un domaine avec beaucoup d'erreurs de balisage perd sa confiance ?
Pourquoi mes rich snippets s'affichent de manière intermittente ?
Un concurrent sans balisage Schema affiche des snippets, comment est-ce possible ?
Faut-il corriger toutes les erreurs remontées par la Search Console ?
Les rich snippets influencent-ils directement le ranking ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 11/07/2019
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