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Official statement

Security alerts in Search Console (malware, phishing, hacked site) do not affect how Google crawls the site, but they can impact the display of pages in search results. Google remains cautious about what it shows to users if the site poses risks.
38:14
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:02 💬 EN 📅 21/08/2020 ✂ 50 statements
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Other statements from this video 49
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  2. 1:46 Can JavaScript really hide your links from Google without destroying them?
  3. 3:43 Is it really necessary to optimize the first link on a page for SEO?
  4. 3:43 Does Google really combine signals from multiple links pointing to the same page?
  5. 5:20 Do site-wide links in the menu and footer really dilute the PageRank of your strategic pages?
  6. 6:22 Is it really necessary to nofollow site-wide links to your legal pages to optimize PageRank?
  7. 7:24 Should you really keep nofollow on your footer links and service pages?
  8. 10:10 Why does Google make it impossible to use Search Console Insights without Analytics?
  9. 11:08 Does Nofollow still affect crawling without passing on PageRank?
  10. 11:08 Does nofollow really block indexing, or can Google still crawl those URLs?
  11. 13:50 Why is Google so tight-lipped about its indexing incidents?
  12. 15:58 Should you really index all paged pages to optimize your SEO?
  13. 15:59 Is it really necessary to index all pagination pages to optimize your SEO?
  14. 19:53 Are URL parameters still an obstacle for organic search?
  15. 19:53 Are URL parameters really a non-issue for SEO anymore?
  16. 21:50 Is it true that Google is blocking the indexing of new sites?
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  18. 25:33 Are sitemaps really essential for Google indexing?
  19. 26:03 How does Google really discover your new URLs?
  20. 27:28 Why does Google require a canonical on ALL AMP pages, including standalone ones?
  21. 27:40 Is the rel=canonical really mandatory on all AMP pages, even standalone ones?
  22. 28:09 Should you really implement hreflang across an entire multilingual site?
  23. 28:41 Should you really implement hreflang on every page of a multilingual website?
  24. 29:08 Is it true that AMP is a speed factor for Google?
  25. 29:16 Should you still invest in AMP to optimize speed and ranking?
  26. 29:50 Why does Google measure Core Web Vitals on the actual page version your visitors are really viewing?
  27. 30:20 Do Core Web Vitals really measure what your users actually see?
  28. 31:23 Should you manually deindex old pagination URLs after changing your site's architecture?
  29. 31:23 Is it really necessary to manually de-index your old pagination URLs?
  30. 32:08 Is advertising on your site harming your SEO?
  31. 32:48 Does having ads on your site really hurt your Google rankings?
  32. 34:47 Is rel=canonical in syndication really reliable for controlling indexing?
  33. 34:47 Does rel=canonical really protect your syndicated content from ranking theft?
  34. 38:14 Can a hacked site lose its crawl budget due to Google security alerts?
  35. 39:20 Have links in guest posts really lost all SEO value?
  36. 39:20 Do guest post links really have no SEO value?
  37. 40:55 Why does Google ignore identical modification dates in your sitemaps?
  38. 40:55 Why does Google ignore the lastmod dates in your XML sitemap?
  39. 42:00 Should you really update the lastmod date of the sitemap for every minor change?
  40. 42:21 Does a poorly configured sitemap really diminish your crawl budget?
  41. 43:00 Can a misconfigured sitemap really cut down your crawl budget?
  42. 44:34 Should you really have to choose between reducing duplicate content and using canonical tags?
  43. 44:34 Is it really necessary to eliminate all duplicate content or should you rely on rel=canonical?
  44. 45:10 Should you really set a crawl limit in Search Console?
  45. 45:40 Should you really let Google decide your crawl limit?
  46. 47:08 Do internal 301 redirects really dilute PageRank?
  47. 47:48 Do cascading internal 301 redirects really drain SEO juice?
  48. 49:53 Can the JavaScript History API really force Google to change your canonical URL?
  49. 49:53 Can Google really treat URL changes made by JavaScript and the History API as redirects?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that security alerts (malware, phishing, hacked site) in Search Console do not prevent Googlebot from crawling your pages. However, they directly impact the display in SERPs: your URLs may disappear or show warnings that kill your CTR. In practical terms, your site remains technically indexable but becomes invisible to users, resulting in the same business outcome.

What you need to understand

Why does Google separate crawling and display for security issues?

The nuance is critical: Googlebot continues to explore and index your content even if Search Console is bombarding you with security alerts. The engine doesn't stop its technical analysis work just because malware has infiltrated your site.

This separation responds to an infrastructure logic: the crawling system and the ranking/display system operate independently. Googlebot must continue to monitor the web to detect emerging threats, identify the fixes you make, and keep its index up to date. If the crawler stopped immediately with each alert, Google would lose its detection and responsiveness capabilities.

What actually happens in the search results?

The real impact occurs at the time of display. Google may decide not to show your pages to users even if they remain technically indexed. You will see your URLs disappear from SERPs, or display red warnings that deter any clicks.

In some cases, Google even displays a blocking interstitial before accessing the site. Your CTR drops to zero, your organic traffic dies, but technically your content remains in the index. This is a clinical death of SEO without technical removal of the indexing.

What alerts trigger this caution from Google?

Search Console categorizes three major types of security alerts: detected malware (malicious scripts injected), phishing attempts (pages mimicking third-party services to steal data), and hacked site (identified compromise with injected content like pharmaceutical spam or links to casinos).

Google uses Safe Browsing as its detection infrastructure, coupled with manual reports and behavioral analysis algorithms. As soon as one of these alerts is triggered, the flag shifts to your site, and display filters kick in while crawling continues quietly.

  • Crawling remains active: Googlebot continues to explore your pages to monitor the evolution of the threat and detect any possible correction
  • Indexing persists: your URLs remain technically in Google's index; this is not a classic deindexing
  • Display is filtered: Google masks or signals your pages to users according to the severity of the detected alert
  • Recovery is possible: once the issue is fixed and validated in Search Console, normal display resumes typically within 24-72 hours
  • Response time matters: the longer you take to fix, the tougher Google tightens display filters and extends the alert's reach to other sections of the site

SEO Expert opinion

Is this crawling/display separation consistent with what we observe on the ground?

Absolutely. I have monitored dozens of cases of hacked sites where Search Console continued to report new crawled pages even as organic traffic had plummeted to zero. Server logs confirmed regular visits from Googlebot, including to compromised sections.

What is less transparent is the speed of reaction between detection and filtering. Sometimes the alert appears in GSC but the SERP display remains normal for 12-24 hours. Other times it's almost instantaneous. Google does not communicate on triggering thresholds, leaving a blurry area to anticipate the impact. [To be verified]: are there severity criteria that speed up or delay filtering?

What collateral risks are not mentioned in this statement?

Mueller remains intentionally vague on a critical point: the impact on indirect quality signals. If your pages disappear from the SERPs for several weeks due to a security alert, your historical CTR collapses, your backlinks lose their referral juice (people are no longer clicking), your bounce rate skyrockets if a few users do click through.

These degraded signals can affect your ranking after the alert is corrected, even when the display returns to normal. Google will not magically re-calculate your authority as if nothing had happened. Traffic recovery often takes 4-8 weeks, well beyond the 72-hour timeframe for alert lifting.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

If your host detects malware and cuts access to the site with a prolonged 503 Service Unavailable, Googlebot will eventually slow down its crawling drastically, or even deindex some URLs after several weeks of inaccessibility. It is no longer the security alert blocking the crawl, but technical unavailability.

Another edge case: some sophisticated malware serve different content to Googlebot versus users (cloaking). If Google detects this behavior, the security alert is accompanied by a manual penalty for manipulation, and then yes, you risk a more aggressive action than simple display filtering. But this goes beyond the strict scope of Mueller's statement.

Warning: do not confuse security alert with manual action. A Safe Browsing alert in Search Console is not a classic algorithmic or manual penalty. The correction and validation process is entirely different, with distinct timelines and Google teams.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do immediately if a security alert appears in Search Console?

First isolate the source of compromise before fixing the symptoms. Too many SEOs clean the visible malware without understanding how it got installed, and find themselves reinfected 48 hours later. Check for suspicious FTP/SSH accounts, outdated WordPress plugins, backdoors in legacy code.

Once the breach is identified and closed, remove all malicious code and submit a review request via Search Console. Google clarifies that the entire site must be corrected, not just the examples of URLs listed in the alert. They will re-crawl everything before lifting the flag.

How can you limit the traffic impact during the correction?

Let's be honest: you cannot prevent the collapse of traffic if Google displays red warnings. But you can accelerate recovery by precisely documenting your corrective actions in the Search Console review request.

At the same time, bolster your presence on other channels (email, social media, paid search if budget allows) to maintain some visibility while organic is down. Some clients temporarily activate display retargeting to recover historical visitors who can no longer find the site in Google.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in post-alert management?

Do not overwhelm Google with multiple review requests if the first does not yield results within 48 hours. Each review takes an average of 3-7 days, and spamming the system can prolong the delays. If your first request is rejected, it is because the fix is incomplete — re-scan the site with tools like Sucuri or Wordfence.

Another classic mistake: restoring an old backup without verifying that it does not already contain dormant malware. Analyze the backup before restoration, otherwise you reinject the problem yourself. And do not neglect post-correction security (changed passwords, 2FA enabled, hardened file permissions) — a rapid reinfection puts you back at square one with Google being even more wary.

  • Identify and seal the security breach before any cosmetic correction of the malware
  • Scan the entire site with specialized tools, not just Google's example URLs
  • Submit a detailed review request in Search Console with documentation of corrective actions
  • Strengthen overall security (updates, permissions, strong authentication) to prevent reinfection
  • Monitor server logs and Search Console daily for 2-4 weeks post-correction
  • Plan an alternative communication strategy if organic traffic remains blocked beyond 72 hours
Managing a security alert in Search Console requires sharp technical expertise and immediate responsiveness. Between forensic analysis of the compromise, thorough code cleaning, enhanced security measures, and recovery follow-up, the process can quickly become complex for a team without specific experience in these incidents. If you lack internal resources or if the business stakes do not allow for delays, hiring an SEO agency specialized in security crisis management can significantly speed up resolution and minimize traffic loss. The support of experts also helps to avoid errors that unnecessarily prolong the blockage.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Si Google continue à crawler mon site malgré l'alerte sécurité, mes nouvelles pages seront-elles indexées normalement ?
Non. Google crawle et indexe techniquement vos nouvelles pages, mais elles ne s'afficheront pas dans les résultats de recherche tant que l'alerte sécurité n'est pas levée. Le contenu entre dans l'index mais reste filtré côté affichage.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google lève l'alerte après correction du problème ?
Entre 3 et 7 jours en moyenne après soumission d'une demande de révision dans Search Console. Google doit re-crawler le site, vérifier l'absence de malware, et valider manuellement la correction avant de retirer les avertissements dans les SERP.
Une alerte sécurité peut-elle impacter mon classement après sa résolution ?
Indirectement oui. La période de filtrage dégrade vos signaux comportementaux (CTR, engagement), ce qui peut affecter votre autorité perçue. La récupération complète du trafic et des positions prend généralement 4 à 8 semaines après levée de l'alerte.
Google crawle-t-il plus ou moins fréquemment un site avec alerte sécurité ?
La fréquence de crawl ne change pas significativement selon Mueller. Googlebot maintient son rythme habituel pour surveiller l'évolution du problème et détecter une éventuelle correction. Le crawl budget n'est pas pénalisé par l'alerte elle-même.
Faut-il bloquer temporairement le site en 503 le temps de nettoyer le malware ?
Non, sauf si le risque pour les utilisateurs est immédiat et grave. Un 503 prolongé peut déclencher une désindexation progressive, ce qui complique la récupération. Mieux vaut corriger rapidement en production et soumettre immédiatement la demande de révision.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Search Console

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 21/08/2020

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