Official statement
Other statements from this video 24 ▾
- 1:03 Faut-il vraiment maintenir deux sitemaps lors d'une migration HTTPS ?
- 1:06 Faut-il vraiment soumettre les anciennes URLs HTTP dans le sitemap lors d'une migration HTTPS ?
- 6:35 Google peut-il vraiment mesurer la vitesse de chargement pour le classement SEO ?
- 11:06 La vitesse de chargement impacte-t-elle vraiment le classement Google ?
- 11:25 Les améliorations progressives suffisent-elles à sortir d'une pénalité Panda ?
- 11:26 Panda récompense-t-il vraiment les améliorations progressives d'un site pénalisé ?
- 12:06 Faut-il migrer tous les sous-domaines vers HTTPS en une seule fois ou par étapes ?
- 12:57 Google indexe-t-il vraiment correctement les sites JavaScript ?
- 12:57 AngularJS est-il compatible avec une indexation Google optimale ?
- 14:00 Un site photo sans texte peut-il vraiment ranker dans Google ?
- 14:00 Le contenu textuel est-il vraiment obligatoire pour ranker des images ?
- 16:00 Comment Google choisit-il vraiment les mots-clés qui font ranker votre site ?
- 16:41 Les pages en noindex diluent-elles vraiment le PageRank de votre site ?
- 20:13 Faut-il migrer tous ses sous-domaines HTTPS en une seule fois ou progressivement ?
- 22:21 Les liens naturels sont-ils vraiment plus efficaces que les liens obtenus par stratégie SEO ?
- 22:47 Les liens naturels sont-ils vraiment plus efficaces que les backlinks manipulés pour le classement Google ?
- 28:56 Le structured data influence-t-il vraiment le classement organique ?
- 29:42 Comment Google filtre-t-il vraiment le contenu dupliqué pour l'indexation ?
- 31:10 Les algorithmes de Google sont-ils vraiment 100% automatiques ?
- 32:08 AMP booste-t-il vraiment votre classement Google ?
- 39:52 La sandbox Google existe-t-elle vraiment ou est-ce un mythe SEO ?
- 43:05 Faut-il migrer son site en IPv6 pour améliorer son référencement Google ?
- 58:08 Pourquoi les images ralentissent-elles votre migration de site ?
- 71:37 Hreflang suffit-il vraiment à garantir l'affichage de la bonne version linguistique dans Google ?
Google denies the existence of a sandbox that would deliberately penalize new sites. What appears to be a temporary penalty is actually the natural delay for analyzing, understanding, and properly indexing new content. For SEO practitioners, this means stopping passive waiting and focusing on strong trust signals from the launch.
What you need to understand
What exactly do we mean by 'Google sandbox' in the SEO community?
The term sandbox refers to a phenomenon observed since the early 2000s: some new sites struggle to rank in the early months, even with quality content and solid backlinks. SEO practitioners have long suspected that Google deliberately places these sites in a quarantine period, a kind of algorithmic purgatory.
This theory is supported by field observations: a new site, even well-optimized, remains invisible on competitive queries for 3 to 6 months. After this period, rankings sometimes surge dramatically. This recurring pattern has fueled the idea that a temporary filter systematically applies to new domains.
Why does Google deny the existence of this mechanism?
According to John Mueller, there is no sandbox filter in Google's code. The observed delay can be explained by legitimate algorithmic processes: Google must first discover the content, analyze its quality, evaluate its thematic relevance, and test its reception by users. This is not a punishment; it is a learning process.
Google manages billions of pages and must make choices. A new site without history poses an algorithmic risk: spam, duplicate content, disguised link farms. The algorithm takes its time to accumulate trust signals before granting visibility. This is not an arbitrary block; it is computational caution.
How does Google evaluate new or uncertain content?
The evaluation relies on several layers of signals. Google first crawls the site, indexes the pages, and then analyzes the semantic context, internal link structure, and writing quality. Then comes the crucial phase: the algorithm tests the site on low-competition queries to measure engagement metrics (CTR, time on page, bounce rate).
If these signals are positive, Google gradually increases visibility. If users flee the page or click the back button immediately, the algorithm slows down. This iterative process explains why a site may stagnate for weeks before taking off: Google waits for behavioral proofs before investing crawl budget and visibility.
- No hard-coded sandbox filter, but a gradual evaluation process for new content
- The observed delay corresponds to the time needed to accumulate trust signals (engagement, natural backlinks, thematic authority)
- Google tests new sites on low-competition queries before exposing them on strategic keywords
- A new site without a history represents an algorithmic risk that Google manages cautiously, not punitively
- Indexing does not guarantee ranking: content may be indexed but deemed insufficiently reliable for immediate display
SEO Expert opinion
Does Google's explanation hold up against field observations?
Yes and no. Mueller's statement is technically true: there probably isn’t a line of code labeled "sandbox.py" in Google's servers. But the observable effect is indeed real, and for an SEO practitioner, it doesn’t matter what name is given to it. When a new site stagnates for six months despite impeccable technical SEO, the lived experience is indistinguishable from a temporary penalty.
What Mueller describes as "the necessary time to understand" closely resembles a gradual filtering process. Google has a vested interest in slowing the visibility of new domains to limit spam. It's rational, defensible, but it still remains a restriction mechanism. Saying "it's not a sandbox" while describing a process that produces exactly the same effects is playing with words.
What signals actually accelerate the exit from this uncertainty period?
Field observations show that some levers work better than others. First, editorial backlinks from established, thematically close sites. Not directories, not press releases: natural mentions that transfer trust. Next, a coherent internal linking structure that helps Google understand the semantic architecture of the site.
But the most underestimated signal remains user behavior. A site that generates direct visits (brand typed in the address bar), long sessions, and organic shares on social media sends a clear message: this content has a real audience. Google cannot ignore these behavioral signals. [To be verified] If Google claims that the evaluation time is non-compressible, why do some sites take off in 6 weeks while others remain invisible for 6 months? The hidden variable is probably the velocity of positive signals.
In what cases does Google's explanation not match reality?
Some patterns remain unexplained. For instance, a site that takes over an expired domain with a clean history can completely bypass this uncertainty period. Yet, the content is new, the team is new, only the domain has a past. If Google evaluated solely the intrinsic quality of the content, this difference should not exist.
Another problematic case: multilingual sites. When an established French site launches an English version, this new section often experiences the same initial stagnation phenomenon. Yet, the main domain has authority, and the technical structure is proven. Only the content changes language. This suggests that a specific filter applies at the level of new content, regardless of the overall authority of the domain. Google won't call it a sandbox, but the effect is there.
Practical impact and recommendations
What practical steps should be taken to minimize this evaluation delay?
First, maximize trust signals from day one. This starts with impeccable technical SEO: HTTPS, optimal loading speed, mobile-first, relevant structured data. Google should be able to crawl and index without friction. A slow or poorly configured site mechanically slows down the evaluation process.
Next, build clear thematic authority from the first pages. It’s better to publish 20 excellent and in-depth articles on a specific topic than 100 superficial articles on 50 different themes. Google needs to quickly understand what the site is about. A vague positioning extends the uncertainty period.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided on a new site?
The worst mistake: buying backlinks en masse right at launch. This activates all of Google’s spam detectors and turns a normal evaluation period into algorithmic distrust. A new site that accumulates 50 backlinks in one week triggers alerts. Google then deliberately slows the process to verify if it’s spam.
Another classic pitfall: publishing all content at once. Indexing 200 pages in 48 hours on a virgin domain looks like scraping or automated duplicate content. It’s better to spread publication over several weeks, with a coherent rhythm. Google prefers to see organic growth rather than a sudden explosion.
How to track if your site is progressing during this evaluation phase?
Use Search Console to track three key metrics. First, the number of indexed versus submitted pages. If Google indexes but does not rank, it’s probably still evaluating. Next, monitor impressions on long-tail queries. This is where Google tests a new site. If these impressions increase, the process is moving forward.
Finally, check the average positions on low-competition keywords. A site in the evaluation period first takes off on niches, then gradually rises to more generic queries. If you see this progression, it means Google is accumulating trust. Total stagnation after three months? There’s probably a structural issue to correct.
- Optimize technical SEO before launch (HTTPS, speed, mobile, structured data)
- Publish thematically coherent and in-depth content rather than scattered
- Spread content publication over several weeks to simulate organic growth
- Prioritize editorial backlinks from established sites rather than artificial mass links
- Generate direct traffic and positive behavioral signals (newsletters, social networks, brand search)
- Monitor the evolution of long-tail impressions in Search Console to detect progress signals
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps dure cette période d'évaluation pour un nouveau site ?
Un domaine expiré permet-il de contourner ce processus d'évaluation ?
Faut-il éviter de créer des backlinks pendant les premiers mois ?
Google traite-t-il différemment un sous-domaine et un nouveau domaine ?
Les signaux comportementaux influencent-ils vraiment la vitesse d'indexation ?
🎥 From the same video 24
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h04 · published on 29/11/2016
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