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Official statement

In cases of discrepancies between statistics with and without country filters in Search Console, the highest displayed number is typically the most accurate, due to the way data sampling operates in the background.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:53 💬 EN 📅 24/07/2020 ✂ 53 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

When comparing statistics with and without geographic filters in Search Console, the highest number generally reflects the closest reality to your actual traffic. This difference can be explained by how Google samples data in the background. Specifically, if you see 10,000 clicks without a filter and 8,500 with the France filter, trust the 10,000 rather than considering the difference as an anomaly.

What you need to understand

How does Search Console sample traffic data?

Google does not store each request individually in an exhaustive manner. The Search Console works with a sampling system that aggregates search data. When you apply a country filter, the tool re-queries the already sampled database and creates a sub-sample of a sample.

This double layer of sampling explains why you lose precision. The more filters you stack — country, device type, short timeframe — the more you reduce the initial sample. The displayed figure then becomes less representative of the actual traffic volume.

Why is the total without filter more reliable?

The overall number, before any filters, relies on the widest and most representative sample that Search Console can form. It is the snapshot closest to the reality of your performance. When you add filters, you slice this sample into thinner pieces.

As a result, some data fall below the privacy thresholds that Google applies. Others simply disappear because they weren't retained in the sub-sample. The total without filter captures more signals and better reflects the entire traffic that your site actually generates.

When do we observe these discrepancies?

Discrepancies are particularly noticeable on high-traffic sites or with a fragmented international audience. If you filter by country on a site that generates 500,000 monthly impressions across 40 countries, sampling can lead to sometimes significant discrepancies.

On small sites or local niches, the gap often remains marginal. But as soon as you cross several dimensions — mobile device + country + specific query — the margin of error increases mechanically. This is an effect of the granularity of your filters, not a bug in the interface.

  • Cascading sampling reduces the reliability of filtered data
  • The overall number without filter reflects the largest sample available
  • Discrepancies are proportional to traffic volume and geographic diversity
  • Multiplying filters amplifies the loss of precision of displayed data

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with observed practices?

Yes, and it confirms what many of us have observed for years when comparing Search Console and Google Analytics. The numbers never match perfectly, even considering methodological differences. Sampling explains a substantial part of these discrepancies.

Let’s be honest: this logic becomes problematic when you need to justify a country-by-country SEO strategy to a client. If filtered data underestimates actual traffic by 15 to 20%, you risk underestimating your efforts. The problem is that Google provides no indication of margin of error to know how reliable your filtered figures are.

What nuances should be added?

Mueller says the highest number is “generally” correct. This “generally” hides quite a few gray areas. If you apply a country filter and the number increases instead of decreasing, that's already a signal that something is wrong with geographic attribution or data processing.

Another point: this rule applies to sampling-related discrepancies, not simple bugs. If you see a difference of 300% between two views, the issue is probably not just a matter of sampling. [To be verified]: Google never specifies the threshold at which a discrepancy becomes abnormal.

When does this rule not apply?

If you’re working on a site with multiple language versions and complex geographic targeting, the overall data may mix completely different queries. In this case, the total is certainly more “comprehensive,” but it has no actionable value for driving a local strategy.

The same goes for sites that have indexing or duplication issues between country versions. The overall figure will be inflated by noise — wrongly indexed pages, cannibalizations — while the filtered data, even if under-sampled, can provide a more coherent view of actual performance by market.

Warning: Do not blindly rely on the overall figure if your site exhibits structural inconsistencies in its geographic or language targeting. In this context, even a complete sample can reflect a distorted reality.

Practical impact and recommendations

What practical steps should be taken to accurately leverage this data?

First, stop fixating on discrepancies of a few percent. If you see 10,500 clicks without a filter and 10,200 with the France filter, that’s statistical noise. Focus on trends and significant variations — those exceeding 15-20% — that persist over time.

Next, use the overall number as a framing benchmark, but cross-reference it with other sources: Google Analytics 4, your server logs, third-party tools. The sampling from Search Console should never be your sole source of truth for heavy strategic decisions.

What mistakes should be avoided when interpreting these discrepancies?

Don't fall into the trap of cumulatively applying filters without thought. Filtering by country + device type + specific page + 7-day period gives you such a reduced sub-sample that it becomes unusable. The displayed figures lose all meaning.

Another classic error: assuming that long-tail query data is reliable when passing through multiple filters. If a query only appears in a filtered view and not in the overall view, it’s probably a sampling artifact, not a genuine SEO opportunity.

How should you structure your reports to account for this sampling?

Favor aggregated views: group of pages, query categories, long periods (months or quarters). Sampling smooths discrepancies over high volumes. Always document the source of your figures and whether or not filters were applied.

When presenting country-by-country data to a client or your management, include a methodological note: “Data from Search Console with geographic filter, subject to sampling. Actual traffic is likely higher by X% based on historical observations.” This avoids misinterpretations and maintains trust in your analyses.

  • Use the overall figure as a strategic framing reference
  • Cross-reference Search Console with Google Analytics 4 and server logs
  • Limit the accumulation of filters to avoid over-sampling
  • Document the presence of filters in all your client reports
  • Analyze trends over long periods rather than weekly snapshots
  • Accept a margin of uncertainty of 10-15% on filtered data
Rigorous management of Search Console data, taking into account sampling and structural biases, requires sharp expertise. If you're looking to fully leverage these indicators to refine your international strategy or drive complex SEO campaigns, the support of a specialized SEO agency can save you valuable time and help avoid decisions based on misinterpreted data.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je toujours ignorer les données filtrées par pays dans Search Console ?
Non. Utilisez-les pour identifier des tendances et des variations relatives entre pays, mais ne les prenez jamais comme des volumes absolus fiables. Le chiffre global reste votre référence pour le dimensionnement stratégique.
Pourquoi mes données filtrées affichent-elles parfois un nombre supérieur au total ?
C'est un signal d'incohérence dans l'échantillonnage ou l'attribution géographique. Cela peut indiquer un problème de ciblage technique (hreflang mal configuré, redirections géolocalisées défaillantes) plutôt qu'un simple artefact statistique.
Quel est le seuil d'écart acceptable entre données filtrées et globales ?
Google ne donne aucun chiffre officiel. Par expérience, un écart de 10 à 20 % reste dans les marges d'échantillonnage normales pour des sites à fort volume international. Au-delà de 30 %, creusez pour identifier un problème structurel.
Les données de requêtes spécifiques sont-elles affectées par cet échantillonnage ?
Oui, et encore plus fortement. Les requêtes longue traîne à faible volume peuvent disparaître totalement des vues filtrées. Ne basez jamais une stratégie de contenu sur une requête qui n'apparaît que dans une vue hyper-filtrée.
Comment croiser Search Console et Google Analytics pour corriger ces biais ?
Comparez les tendances globales (mois par mois, pays par pays) plutôt que les chiffres absolus. Si Search Console montre +15 % et GA4 +12 %, la tendance est validée. Si l'un monte et l'autre baisse, il y a un problème technique ou méthodologique à investiguer.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Search Console

🎥 From the same video 52

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 24/07/2020

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