Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- □ Can you manage multiple websites without triggering SEO penalties?
- □ Does the dash vs underscore distinction in URLs really impact your SEO rankings?
- □ Does noindex follow really guarantee that Google will explore your internal links?
- □ Does Google Really Ignore URL Fragments with # for SEO Rankings?
- □ Do short 503 errors really impact your site's crawl rate?
- □ Why is noindex more effective than robots.txt for hiding a site from Google?
- □ Does switching web hosting really hurt your search engine rankings?
- □ Is the Indexing API really restricted to job postings and events only?
- □ Should you really ban text embedded directly in images?
- □ Does having duplicate burger menus in your DOM hurt your SEO rankings?
- □ Can you really target multiple countries with a single page using hreflang?
- □ Do external 404 errors really hurt your Google rankings?
- □ Should you really abandon separate mobile URLs (m-dot) for better SEO results?
Gary Illyes confirms that sitemaps are not required to be indexed by Google. If you decide to use one, you can name it however you want — there's no need to follow the sitemap.xml convention. This statement reminds us that organic crawling remains the primary mechanism for content discovery.
What you need to understand
Why does Google insist that sitemaps are optional?
Google has always maintained that its crawler is capable of discovering and indexing content without a sitemap, as long as your internal linking architecture is coherent. The sitemap is just a helper tool — not an indispensable crutch.
This position reflects a technical reality: Googlebot follows links. If your site is properly structured and your important pages are accessible within a few clicks from the homepage, the crawler will find them naturally.
In what contexts does a sitemap become useful after all?
Where Gary Illyes remains vague is on situations where a sitemap really makes a difference. In practice: large websites, temporary orphaned content, pages with low link depth. On an e-commerce site with 50,000 products or a news site with daily publications, the sitemap accelerates discovery.
Without a sitemap, you let Google decide the crawl priority order — with a well-structured sitemap, you guide the bot toward the URLs you consider strategic.
Does the filename really have zero importance?
Google claims you can call your sitemap url-list.xml, product-feed.xml, or even secret-index.xml — as long as you declare it in Search Console or robots.txt. Technically, that's true.
In practice, following the sitemap.xml convention remains the standard for a simple reason: compatibility with all third-party tools, universal documentation, less friction with technical teams who don't do full-time SEO.
- Sitemaps are not mandatory if your internal linking is solid and your site is of moderate size
- They remain useful for guiding crawl on complex sites, dynamic content, or pages with low internal visibility
- The filename is free — but sitemap.xml remains the safest convention to avoid misunderstandings
- Declaration is mandatory: robots.txt or Search Console, otherwise Google won't find it if the name is non-standard
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?
Yes, but with nuances. On well-designed sites with fewer than 1,000 pages, I've seen cases where the sitemap brought no measurable gain in terms of index coverage. Organic crawling was more than sufficient.
However, on complex architectures — marketplaces, news sites, UGC platforms — the sitemap often makes the difference between a page indexed in 48 hours and a page discovered after three weeks. [To be verified]: Gary never specifies at what volume or complexity level the sitemap becomes decisive.
What mistakes are still being made with sitemaps?
The most common: including non-indexable URLs in the sitemap (301 redirects, pages with noindex, content blocked by robots.txt). This pollutes the signal sent to Google and dilutes the effectiveness of the file.
Another frequent problem: 50,000-URL sitemaps that aren't segmented, without priority or update frequency. Google will crawl them, but without hierarchy — might as well send nothing. A well-structured sitemap should reflect your editorial strategy, not just a SQL dump of all your URLs.
Should you abandon sitemaps if Google says they're optional?
No. That would be too literal a reading. What Google is saying is: "We don't need it to crawl your site." What it's not saying is: "You don't need it to optimize our crawl."
Let's be honest: if you have a limited crawl budget, strategic pages buried in depth, or frequently updated content, a well-thought-out sitemap remains a relevant optimization lever. The key is not to see it as a magic solution — but as a complement to solid architecture.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do with this information?
First action: audit your current sitemap. Verify it contains only indexable, accessible, and strategic URLs. Use Search Console to identify coverage errors related to the sitemap.
Second action: test organic discovery. Publish a page without submitting it via sitemap and observe how long Google takes to naturally crawl it. If it's fast, your internal linking works — the sitemap is a bonus, not a crutch.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Don't overload your sitemaps with non-strategic URLs: low-relevance tag pages, facet filters, paginated pages without unique content. This dilutes the signal and wastes crawl budget.
Also avoid neglecting sitemap declaration if you choose a non-standard name. If your file is called product-urls.xml, ensure it's referenced in robots.txt or manually submitted via Search Console — otherwise Google will never find it.
How can you verify that your sitemap strategy is optimal?
- Verify your sitemap contains only HTTP 200 URLs, with no redirects or errors
- Segment your sitemaps by content type (products, articles, categories) to ease monitoring
- Check crawl frequency in Search Console: if Google ignores 80% of your URLs, your sitemap is probably miscalibrated
- Test organic discovery on a few key pages — if it's fast, your internal linking is healthy
- Use
<lastmod>and<priority>tags only if they reflect editorial reality — not to bluff Google - Explicitly declare your sitemap in robots.txt if the filename is non-standard
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je supprimer mon sitemap si Google dit qu'il n'est pas obligatoire ?
Puis-je vraiment nommer mon sitemap autrement que sitemap.xml ?
Comment savoir si mon site a vraiment besoin d'un sitemap ?
Quelles URL faut-il inclure dans un sitemap ?
Le sitemap influence-t-il le classement dans les résultats de recherche ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 18/04/2024
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