Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 1:07 Is Google automatically switching back to mobile-first after fixing asymmetry errors?
- 1:07 Is it true that mobile-first indexing is stuck: how long until automatic unlocking?
- 3:14 Does Google flag missing images on mobile: Should you ignore these alerts if your mobile version is intentionally different?
- 3:14 Should you really fix the missing images detected by Google on mobile?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really improve your ranking on Google?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really impact your page rankings?
- 5:17 How does Google blend site-level and page-level signals to rank your pages?
- 5:49 Should you prioritize domain authority or optimize page by page?
- 11:16 Does functional duplicate content really harm your SEO ranking?
- 11:52 Is Google really ignoring duplicate boilerplate content without punishment?
- 13:08 Do you really need multiple questions in an FAQ schema to get a rich snippet?
- 13:08 Should you really abandon the FAQ schema on single-question product pages?
- 14:14 Does schema markup really help you land featured snippets?
- 15:45 Do featured snippets really depend on structured markup or visible content?
- 18:18 Is Google penalizing CSS-hidden FAQ content in an accordion?
- 18:41 Does the FAQ schema really work if answers are hidden in a CSS accordion?
- 19:13 Should you merge two cannibalizing pages or let them coexist?
- 19:53 Is it really necessary to merge your competing pages to boost their rankings?
- 20:58 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risking your SEO?
- 21:36 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risk?
- 23:02 Does the exact order of keywords in your content really affect your Google ranking?
- 23:22 Does the order of keywords on a page really impact Google rankings?
- 27:07 Does the order of keywords in the meta description really affect CTR?
- 27:22 Should you really align the word order in your meta description with the target query?
- 29:56 Does Google really understand your synonyms better than you do?
- 30:29 Should you really stuff your pages with synonyms to rank on Google?
- 31:56 Should you create mixed pages to cover all meanings of a polysemous keyword?
- 34:00 Should you create specialized pages or general pages to rank effectively?
- 35:45 Should you optimize your site for synonyms, or does Google really handle it all by itself?
- 37:52 Does Google really give a 6-month notice before any major SEO changes?
- 39:55 Does Google really announce its major algorithm changes 6 months in advance?
- 43:57 Why are multilingual footer links crucial on every page?
- 44:37 Why do your hreflang links fail when they point to a homepage instead of an equivalent page?
- 44:37 Why does linking to the homepage undermine your hreflang strategy?
- 46:54 Subdomains or Subdirectories for Internationalization: Which Hreflang Architecture Does Google Really Favor?
- 47:44 Should you opt for subdirectories or subdomains for a multilingual site?
- 50:23 Does your shared IP really harm your SEO rankings?
- 50:53 Can shared cloud IPs really harm your SEO?
Google confirms that placing footer links to the homepages of each language variant remains acceptable, even though hreflang on a page-by-page basis is the priority. This practice enhances the visibility of alternative homepages without creating a conflict with the 1:1 hreflang markup. In practice, both methods can coexist: the footer ensures overall navigation, while hreflang guarantees precise equivalence between contents.
What you need to understand
Why does the footer issue keep coming up on multilingual sites?
The confusion surrounding footer links to language versions stems from a recurring misunderstanding: many SEOs think that hreflang alone is sufficient to ensure the visibility of variants. This is false. Hreflang is a technical annotation that helps Google understand the relationships between equivalent pages—it does not guarantee that Googlebot discovers and indexes all your multilingual homepages.
Footer links, on the other hand, play a role in classic internal navigation. They facilitate the initial crawl of alternative homepages, especially for less prioritized languages or geographical areas in your linking structure. Without these links, some versions may remain orphaned at the beginning of deployment, delaying their indexing.
What is the actual hierarchy between hreflang and footer links?
Google is clear: 1:1 hreflang remains the priority to indicate precise equivalence between contents. An article in French must point to its exact counterpart in English, German, etc. This page-by-page markup allows Google to offer the correct language version in the SERPs based on the user's language and location.
Footer links to the homepages, however, operate under a different logic: they ensure global discoverability and coherent user navigation. They are not intended to replace hreflang but to complement it by enhancing the visibility of the main entry points of each language version.
When does this approach really become useful?
For sites with few language versions (2-3 languages), the need is marginal: natural linking and hreflang are generally sufficient. However, once you manage 5, 10, or 20+ language or regional variants, footer links become a valuable safety net.
They ensure that each alternative homepage receives a minimum of internal PageRank and remains visible in the crawl, even if your linking structure favors certain languages (often English or the market's primary language). This is particularly critical when launching a new language version: the footer ensures its immediate crawl.
- The page-by-page hreflang remains the top priority for signaling content equivalences between languages.
- Footer links to homepages enhance discoverability and navigation, especially for sites with many variants.
- Both practices coexist without conflict: they meet different technical needs (equivalence vs crawl/navigation).
- A multilingual site without footer links risks leaving some versions orphaned or poorly crawled at startup.
- The footer provides a minimal but useful internal PageRank signal to alternative homepages.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with practices observed in the field?
Absolutely. For years, we have seen that successful multilingual sites consistently use both leverages: comprehensive hreflang + footer links. Mueller's precision on the fact that "both can coexist without issue" dispels an irrational fear: some SEOs feared that Google would consider footer links as spam or an attempt at manipulation.
In reality, Google has never penalized legitimate footer links to language versions. The problem only arises when the footer becomes a catch-all of dozens of links unrelated to language navigation—but that falls into the realm of overall over-optimization, not multilingualism.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
First point: footer links mainly help the visibility of homepages, not deep pages. If you have 10,000 products in 8 languages, the footer will not solve anything for your product sheets—it’s the page-by-page hreflang that does the work. The footer is a boost for the main entry points, nothing more.
Second nuance: be careful not to confuse "acceptable" and "indispensable." If your internal linking already sends link juice to all your language homepages (via the main menu, editorial links, well-structured sitemap), the marginal contribution of the footer will be low. Conversely, on a site where some versions remain poorly linked, the footer becomes critical.
[To be verified] Google does not specify whether a footer with 20+ language variants can dilute the PageRank of links or negatively impact UX—this is a point where real-world experience and A/B tests take precedence over the official statement.
In which cases does this rule not apply or require adjustments?
Sites with complex regional structures (examples: en-US, en-GB, en-CA, en-AU, etc.) should think twice before putting everything in the footer. A dropdown menu "language/region" in the header may be more UX-friendly than an overloaded footer. The footer remains useful, but should not become a graveyard of links.
Another case: sites using subdomains or separate domains by language. Technically, footer links work, but they pass less PageRank than an internal link on the same domain. If you are on ccTLD (.fr, .de, .it), prioritize hreflang and a more strategic inter-domain linking structure—the footer remains a plus but not the main solution.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to take advantage of this recommendation?
If you manage a multilingual site with 5+ variants, add footer links to each language homepage. Use a discreet yet visible language/region selector (globe icon + dropdown list, or compact list at the bottom of the page). Each link should point to the homepage of the variant, not to an auxiliary page or an intermediate selector.
At the same time, make sure that your page-by-page hreflang is comprehensive and error-free. Each URL must declare all its language equivalences, including itself (self-reference required). The two systems do not replace each other: the footer helps with initial crawling and navigation, while hreflang ensures the correct version appears in the SERPs.
What mistakes should be avoided during implementation?
Do not overload the footer with links to all pages on the site in all languages. Limit strictly to language homepages—adding dozens of secondary links dilutes PageRank and degrades UX. The footer should remain a tool for global navigation, not a complete directory.
Also avoid automatic redirections based on IP geolocation or browser language that short-circuit user choice. Google crawls from the United States: if you systematically redirect to en-US, your other versions may never get crawled. Keep the footer accessible without forced redirection.
How to check that your configuration is correct?
Use Search Console to identify poorly indexed or orphaned language versions. Check that each homepage appears in the coverage report and receives organic traffic. If a variant remains invisible, it is often an internal linking issue—the footer can fill this gap.
Also test your hreflang with specialized tools (Screaming Frog, Ahrefs Site Audit, OnCrawl, etc.). Common errors include: missing self-reference, inconsistency between HTML tags and HTTP headers, invalid language/region codes. A broken hreflang makes the footer even more essential, but does not solve the underlying problem.
- Add footer links to each language homepage to enhance their discoverability.
- Maintain a comprehensive page-by-page hreflang to signal precise content equivalences.
- Avoid automatic redirections that prevent crawling of certain language versions.
- Limit the footer to homepages only, without overloading with secondary links.
- Check hreflang consistency via Search Console and specialized crawl tools.
- Regularly test to ensure that each language variant is properly indexed and receiving organic traffic.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le hreflang suffit-il pour qu'une homepage multilingue soit indexée ?
Peut-on mettre des liens footer uniquement vers certaines langues prioritaires ?
Les liens footer vers les homepages passent-ils du PageRank comme des liens classiques ?
Faut-il utiliser un menu déroulant ou une liste de liens classique dans le footer ?
Cette pratique s'applique-t-elle aussi aux sites utilisant des sous-domaines par langue ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 14/05/2020
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