What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

Creating links among a large number of sites, like 50 or 150, can resemble an artificial link network, which is not organic and may pose problems in Google's view.
0:31
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 2:05 💬 EN 📅 24/04/2013 ✂ 3 statements
Watch on YouTube (0:31) →
Other statements from this video 2
  1. 0:31 Peut-on vraiment créer des liens entre deux sites liés sans risque de pénalité Google ?
  2. 0:35 Pourquoi les réseaux de sites interconnectés sont-ils un signal de faible qualité pour Google ?
📅
Official statement from (13 years ago)
TL;DR

Google specifies that a set of 50 to 150 interconnected sites can be identified as an artificial link network, and therefore non-organic. This statement sets a guideline for practitioners managing multiple sites. Be cautious: the number alone is not enough to trigger a penalty; the structure of the network and intent matter just as much.

What you need to understand

What quantitative threshold does Google mention?

Google explicitly mentions 50 or 150 sites as volumes that may appear to resemble an artificial link network. This number is significant: it indicates that Mountain View observes recurring patterns in this range.

This statement does not set a strict limit, but indicates that as soon as a few dozen interconnected sites exist, algorithms scrutinize the structure of the link graph. Large-scale automation triggers alerts.

Why does Google refer to 'non-organic'?

An organic network is built without centralized coordination. Links appear naturally because the content adds value. In contrast, creating 50 sites solely to manipulate PageRank constitutes an artificial strategy.

Google detects this artificiality through various signals: close creation dates, identical servers, similar templates, over-optimized anchors, and lack of real traffic. A network of 150 sites launched within six months on the same host is hard to ignore.

Does this limit apply to all contexts?

No. Google distinguishes legitimate networks (media groups, franchises, editorial sites from the same group) from manipulative networks. The statement clearly targets PBNs (Private Blog Networks) and link farms.

If you manage 80 regional news sites with distinct editorial teams, it is not an artificial network. If those 80 sites share the same whois, the same CMS, and all point to your money site with commercial anchors, that's a different story.

  • 50-150 interconnected sites: the threshold where Google closely scrutinizes the nature of links
  • Artificiality detected via patterns: shared infrastructure, creation dates, absence of organic traffic
  • Legitimate networks are not targeted: media groups, franchises, independent thematic sites
  • Main risk: devaluation of links, or even manual action if clear manipulation occurs
  • Intent matters as much as the number: a manifest network of 30 sites can be penalized, while 200 legitimate sites may pass

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, largely. Feedback confirms that PBNs with more than 50 sites attract Google's attention, especially since the Penguin update and its refinements. Manual penalties regularly affect networks within this range.

However, one point is missing: Google does not specify the problematic link density. A network of 100 sites linking to each other (9,900 internal links) is quite different from 100 sites each pointing to a single central hub (100 links). Topology matters as much as volume. [To verify]: no public data indicates whether Google calculates a link/site ratio to trigger a flag.

What nuances should be considered?

The figure of 50-150 sites is not a binary threshold. Google first analyzes the footprint: hosting, registrar, shared analytics, anchor patterns. Five poorly disguised sites may be detected, while 200 well-isolated sites might remain under the radar for years.

Let's be honest: the risk is not so much the absolute size as the naivety of the implementation. Networks that get caught often have glaring mistakes: same C-class IP, same WordPress template, mass-generated articles, zero natural incoming backlinks. Google detects these patterns through machine learning trained on millions of sites.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

Three situations escape this logic. First, legitimate media groups: a publisher with 300 thematic sites having distinct teams, real traffic, and documented advertising revenue. Google knows how to differentiate.

Next, franchise networks or local sites: 200 independent restaurants under the same brand, each with its own site do not form an artificial network, even if the headquarters puts links to each franchise. The business context is transparent.

Finally, industry directories or content platforms: a network of 100 contributory blogs on a specific niche, with different authors and varied content, does not trigger an alert if the editorial value is real. The key remains intention and transparency.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should I do concretely if I manage multiple sites?

The first rule: document the legitimacy of each site. If you own 40 thematic sites, ensure each has a clear editorial purpose, unique content, identified authors, and measurable traffic. Google may require proof during a manual review.

The second point: isolate technical footprints. Vary hosting providers, registrars, CMS, templates. Do not use the same Google Analytics or Search Console account across 50 linked sites. Space out creation dates. Each site should have a distinct technical identity if you want to avoid automated detection.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never create a network with identical over-optimized anchors across all sites. “Divorce lawyer Paris” as an exact match from 80 sites signals alarm bells. Vary the anchors, favor branded and naked URL links, and insert natural contextual links.

Avoid zombie sites with no traffic. A network of 100 sites each getting 10 visits per month solely through internal links is suspicious. Invest in content that attracts organic traffic, even modest amounts. Google cross-references Analytics data (when available) and behavioral signals.

How to audit an existing network to reduce risks?

Map out the internal link structure: how many sites point to your money site? What is the density of linking between satellite sites? If you notice a pattern that's too regular (all sites link to the hub with 2-3 links each), randomize and reduce.

Analyze the technical footprints with tools like Majestic or Ahrefs: same IP, same DNS server, same technology. If 60% of your sites share the same footprint, it's a problem. Gradually migrate to break the patterns.

  • Check for diversity in hosting: no more than 5-6 sites on the same server
  • Vary registrars and mask whois: privacy protection is mandatory
  • Space out creation dates: not 50 sites launched in the same month
  • Audit link anchors: no more than 20% exact match, favor branded and naked URLs
  • Create real traffic on each site: social campaigns, independent SEO, guest posts
  • Document editorial legitimacy: teams, authors, mission of each site
Managing a large-scale network of sites requires constant technical and editorial vigilance. If the complexity of this orchestration exceeds your internal resources or if you're concerned about footprint errors, consulting a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly penalties. An expert outside perspective can identify invisible patterns and structure a resilient network.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de sites puis-je gérer sans risque de pénalité Google ?
Il n'existe pas de nombre magique. Google tolère des centaines de sites si chacun a une légitimité éditoriale, du trafic réel et des footprints techniques distincts. Le risque apparaît quand la coordination et l'artificialité deviennent évidentes, souvent dès 30-50 sites mal camouflés.
Les réseaux de sites de niche sont-ils tous considérés comme artificiels ?
Non. Un réseau thématique avec du contenu unique, des auteurs identifiés et du trafic organique reste légitime. Google sanctionne les réseaux créés uniquement pour manipuler le PageRank, pas les projets éditoriaux multi-sites authentiques.
Quel est le principal signal qui trahit un réseau de liens artificiel ?
Les footprints techniques communes : même hébergeur, même IP C-class, même whois, dates de création rapprochées, absence de backlinks entrants naturels. Google croise ces signaux avec les patterns d'ancres et le comportement utilisateur pour détecter l'artificialité.
Puis-je utiliser le même compte Search Console pour plusieurs sites liés ?
Oui, mais c'est un signal de corrélation. Si vous gérez 50 sites dans le même compte GSC et qu'ils se lient tous vers un même hub, Google peut établir un lien de propriété. Pour un réseau discret, utilisez des comptes distincts.
Que risque-t-on concrètement avec un réseau de liens détecté ?
Dévaluation des liens dans le meilleur cas : Google ignore simplement les liens du réseau. Dans les cas manifestes de manipulation, action manuelle possible avec perte de rankings et obligation de nettoyer le profil de liens pour récupérer.
🏷 Related Topics
Links & Backlinks

🎥 From the same video 2

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 24/04/2013

🎥 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.