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Official statement

Google uses several signals to determine which URL is canonical, including redirects, meta rel=canonical tags, internal links, XML sitemaps, and external links. It is important that this information is consistent to help Google choose the correct URL to index.
69:54
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h13 💬 EN 📅 30/06/2017 ✂ 8 statements
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Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google relies on a range of signals to determine which URL to index: redirects, canonical tags, internal linking, sitemaps, and external links. The consistency among these signals is crucial for guiding Google toward the right choice. When signals conflict, the search engine decides on its own, and the outcome is not always what we hope for.

What you need to understand

Why does Google need to determine a canonical URL?

The web is full of legitimate duplicate content: product listings accessible via multiple URLs, pages with tracking parameters, HTTP and HTTPS versions, with or without www. Google must decide which version to display in search results and consolidate ranking signals (backlinks, authority, user signals) towards a single URL.

Without this consolidation, signals disperse across several versions of the same content. The result: no version performs well in SERPs. Canonicalization is not an algorithmic whim; it is a technical necessity for attributing credit to a page.

What signals does Google actually use?

Mueller lists five categories of signals: redirects (301, 302, 307), rel=canonical meta tags, internal linking, XML sitemaps, and external links. Each has a different weight in the final decision.

301 redirects are generally the strongest: they indicate an explicit intention to replace one URL with another. Canonical tags follow, then internal linking. Sitemaps and external links play a more nuanced role, especially when other signals are consistent.

What happens when signals conflict?

This is where the problem arises. If your canonical tag points to URL A, but your internal links mainly point to URL B, and your sitemap lists URL C, Google must decide. There is no magic formula: the algorithm weighs signals according to their perceived reliability.

In this case, Google may choose a URL that you did not anticipate. Worse, it may oscillate between several versions over time, diluting your performance. Consistency is not an option; it is the foundation of an effective canonicalization strategy.

  • 301 Redirects: strong signal of permanent replacement intent
  • Canonical Tags: technical indication preferred by Google
  • Internal Linking: reveals which version you actually consider as primary
  • XML Sitemaps: official declaration of URLs to index
  • External Links: social confirmation of the authoritative version

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and it even provides a rare confirmation of an opaque process. In practice, we regularly observe cases where Google ignores a canonical tag when internal linking heavily points towards another version. This is particularly common on e-commerce sites with parameter URLs: even with a clean canonical, if all internal links include the parameters, Google may decide to index the parameterized version.

Mueller does not provide any rankings among these signals. This is frustrating but consistent with Google's approach: the algorithm adjusts the weighting according to context. A site with a history of erratic redirects may see its 301s less respected than a clean site.

What nuances does this statement omit?

Mueller does not mention the age of URLs, which plays a role. A URL indexed for five years with a solid link profile will not be easily dethroned by a new canonical, even if technically correct. Google favors stability.

He also omits the signal from the content itself. If two URLs display identical content 95% of the time, but one contains additional paragraphs, Google may favor the more complete version, regardless of other signals. [To be verified]: it's unclear how this factor weighs against an explicit canonical tag.

In what cases does this logic fail?

Pagination and filter cases are a nightmare. An e-commerce site with thousands of filter combinations can send contradictory signals even with the best intentions. If the canonical points to the main page but internal links continue using filtered versions, Google struggles.

Another problematic case is poorly managed domain migrations. If old URLs redirect to new ones, but quality backlinks continue pointing to the old ones, Google may hesitate for a long time before fully transferring authority. The consistency of signals is just one factor; the power of historical signals is another.

Note: Google may take several weeks, or even months, to reassess a choice of canonical when you correct inconsistencies. Do not expect an instant switch after you unify your signals.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I check the consistency of signals on my site?

Your first instinct should be to audit the canonical tags en masse. A crawler like Screaming Frog or OnCrawl quickly detects inconsistencies: pages with a canonical pointing to a redirecting URL, chained canonicals, canonicals pointing to 404s. These errors are more common than one might think, especially after a migration.

Next, analyze the internal linking. If 80% of your links point to the URL with a trailing slash but your canonical states the version without a slash, you are sending contradictory signals. The ideal scenario: harmonize the linking so it consistently reinforces the declared canonical version.

What should I do if Google chooses the wrong URL?

Start by checking in Search Console which URL Google considers canonical (in the “Coverage” section or “URL Inspection”). If it’s not the one you want, identify the dominant signal that is influencing Google in the wrong direction. Often, it’s the internal linking or a misconfigured sitemap.

Correct the faulty signal and request reindexing. But be patient: Google may take several crawl cycles to reassess. If the undesirable URL has a strong history (backlinks, age), consider an explicit 301 to force the issue, even if you thought a canonical would suffice.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never chain multiple canonicals (A points to B which points to C). Google can follow two hops, but beyond that, it often gives up. Also avoid unnecessary “self-referential” canonicals on pages with no duplicates: it adds nothing and unnecessarily burdens the code.

Another classic pitfall: declaring a URL as canonical but blocking it in robots.txt or noindex. Google cannot index what it cannot crawl. The result: it ignores your canonical and indexes another version, or worse, indexes nothing at all.

  • Audit all canonical tags to detect loops, chains, and 404 errors
  • Harmonize internal linking to consistently point to the canonical version
  • Check that the URLs declared in the XML sitemap correspond to the canonicals
  • Control in Search Console which URL Google has actually chosen as canonical
  • Avoid canonicals pointing to URLs blocked by robots.txt or noindex
  • Prefer 301 redirects when a permanent replacement is planned
Canonicalization relies on the consistency of signals sent to Google. An isolated canonical tag is not sufficient if the rest of the site (linking, sitemap, redirects) tells a different story. Regularly auditing and harmonizing these signals is a prerequisite for mastering what Google indexes. In practice, these technical optimizations often require detailed analysis and adjustments on multiple levels of the site. If you lack internal resources or if your architecture is complex, engaging a specialized SEO agency can expedite compliance and prevent costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google respecte-t-il toujours la balise rel=canonical ?
Non. Google traite la balise canonical comme une suggestion, pas une directive. Si d'autres signaux (maillage interne, redirections, liens externes) contredisent la canonical, Google peut choisir un autre URL.
Quel signal a le plus de poids pour déterminer l'URL canonique ?
Les redirections 301 sont généralement les plus fortes, suivies des balises canonical et du maillage interne. Mais Google pondère selon le contexte ; il n'y a pas de hiérarchie fixe.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google change d'URL canonique après correction ?
Plusieurs semaines à plusieurs mois selon l'ancienneté de l'URL, son profil de liens et la fréquence de crawl. La patience est de mise.
Peut-on utiliser une canonical vers un autre domaine ?
Oui, Google supporte les canonical cross-domain. Utile pour syndiquer du contenu ou gérer des versions internationales, mais à manier avec prudence pour éviter de perdre l'indexation.
Faut-il mettre une canonical sur toutes les pages ?
Seulement si la page a un risque de duplication. Une canonical auto-référentielle (pointant vers elle-même) est tolérée mais inutile si aucun doublon n'existe.
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