Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 2:02 Peut-on géocibler ses Web Stories dans des sous-dossiers pays sans risque SEO ?
- 15:37 Les Core Web Vitals pénalisent-ils vraiment les sites dont les utilisateurs ont une connexion lente ?
- 16:41 Comment Google segmente-t-il les Core Web Vitals par zone géographique ?
- 17:44 Comment Google classe-t-il un site qui n'a pas encore de données CrUX ?
- 20:25 Faut-il vraiment éviter de toucher à la structure de son site pour plaire à Google ?
- 20:58 Faut-il vraiment bloquer l'indexation de certaines pages pour améliorer son crawl ?
- 25:12 Faut-il vraiment tester avant de supprimer massivement du contenu ?
- 25:43 Faut-il publier tous les jours pour bien ranker sur Google ?
- 26:46 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment pour qu'un changement de navigation impacte votre SEO ?
- 28:49 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer un 404 sur les catégories e-commerce temporairement vides ?
- 30:25 Faut-il vraiment modifier son site pendant un Core Update ?
- 30:55 Un site peut-il vraiment se rétablir entre deux Core Updates sans intervention SEO ?
- 32:01 Pourquoi mes rankings s'effondrent sans aucune alerte dans Search Console ?
- 37:01 Les Core Updates affectent-elles vraiment tout votre site de manière uniforme ?
- 39:28 Faut-il paniquer si votre site n'est toujours pas passé en mobile-first indexing ?
- 41:22 Faut-il encore corriger les erreurs Search Console d'un ancien domaine migré ?
- 43:37 Faut-il diviser son site en plusieurs domaines pour améliorer son SEO ?
- 45:47 L'accessibilité web booste-t-elle vraiment l'indexation et le référencement ?
- 46:50 Faut-il séparer blog et e-commerce sur deux domaines différents pour le SEO ?
- 48:26 Google Discover impose-t-il un quota minimum d'articles pour y figurer ?
- 56:58 Les données structurées améliorent-elles vraiment le classement dans Google ?
- 58:06 Pourquoi vos positions baissent-elles même sans erreur technique ?
Google does not have a strong preference for one URL structure over another — domain/category/product works perfectly. The real risk lies in making changes without a significant reason, which complicates the understanding of the site by the search engine. Stability and consistency outweigh the pursuit of a 'perfect' structure, which does not exist.
What you need to understand
What URL structure does Google really recommend?
The answer can be summed up in one word: none. Mueller asserts that Google does not have a strong opinion on the exact structure of URLs. Whether you choose domain/category/sub-category/product, domain/product, or a hybrid structure, the engine adapts.
What matters is the internal logic of your structure. If it reflects a coherent hierarchy of your content, Google will understand the relationships between your pages. A flat structure (domain/page) works for a 50-page site, but becomes unmanageable beyond a few hundred pieces of content.
Why is structural stability so critical?
Changing the URL structure is akin to reshuffling the cards for Google. Historical signals (links, authority, indexing) are tied to the old URLs. Even with impeccable 301 redirects, there is always some loss of SEO juice and a delay in re-indexing.
Mueller insists: only touch your structure for a significant reason. Technical migration, strategic redesign, domain mergers — these cases justify the risk. Modifying your URLs to gain a 2% click-through rate or because a consultant told you it would be 'better that way'? That's playing with fire.
How does Google interpret structural changes?
A massive change in URLs triggers a relearning phase for Google. The engine must verify that the redirects are clean, recalculate the authority of the new URLs, and adjust positions in the SERPs. This process takes weeks, sometimes months for large sites.
During this period, you are vulnerable. Traffic fluctuations are the norm, not the exception. Some pages may temporarily lose positions, while others gain — as Google stabilizes its understanding of the new mapping.
- No URL structure is intrinsically superior in Google's eyes — consistency is key
- Structural changes trigger a costly relearning phase in terms of time and stability
- A 'significant' reason = significant business impact, not cosmetic optimization
- 301 redirects preserve the majority of SEO juice, but not 100% — there is always some friction
- The URL depth (number of slashes) is not a direct ranking criterion, contrary to what some still believe
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, and it’s even one of the few topics where Google's discourse perfectly matches practitioner reality. I've seen sites with 'ugly' structures (numeric IDs, cascading parameters) rank excellently, and 'perfect' architectures on paper struggle. URL structure is rarely the limiting factor.
What really kills is poorly managed redesigns. A client changes 15,000 URLs to 'modernize' their architecture, forgets 200 redirects, and ends up with a 3-month traffic dip in the SERPs. The negative ROI is brutal. [To be verified]: Google claims that 301 redirects pass 'almost all' PageRank, but no official figures have ever been provided — field tests suggest between 85% and 95%.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
There are legitimate exceptions. An e-commerce site with an incoherent structure (products in /blog/, categories in /pages/) deserves a structural overhaul. A multilingual site that mixes paths and subdomains in a chaotic manner does too.
But even in these cases, the question is not 'what is the perfect structure?' but 'what is the acceptable migration cost to solve this issue?'. If your current structure doesn’t block any measurable SEO performance, leaving it as is remains the best strategy. To be honest: many URL overhauls are motivated by aesthetics or ego, not by data.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller talks about a 'major reason', but does not provide any objective criteria. In reality, a major reason = a blocking technical issue (massive duplicate content, impossible canonicalization), or a business structuring evolution (merging catalogs, internationalization).
Be wary of the survivor bias too: the sites that successfully migrated URLs without issues are the ones that invested heavily in mapping, testing, monitoring. Failures — many of them — rarely turn into public case studies. Mueller's statement is true, but it underestimates the operational complexity of a clean structural change.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do with this information?
First action: audit the consistency of your current structure. Is it logical for a human? Do the categories reflect your content hierarchy? If yes, don't change anything. If not, consider the ROI of a redesign before diving in.
Second reflex: document your current hierarchy in a spreadsheet. List your URL patterns (e.g., /blog/{slug}, /products/{category}/{slug}). This mapping will become your reference for any future evolution — it prevents inconsistencies from accumulating over the years when each project adds its own pattern.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided?
Never change your URLs for cosmetic reasons. 'We want to remove the date from articles' or 'we prefer shorter URLs' are not major reasons. The SEO gain is null, or even negative if the migration is poorly executed.
Also avoid over-optimizing slugs. Adding 5 keywords to a URL does not boost ranking — it's even counterproductive for UX. Google does read URLs, yes, but it's a minor signal compared to the page content. A readable and coherent URL beats a keyword-stuffed one every time.
How to secure a URL migration if it becomes unavoidable?
Map 100% of your current URLs to the new ones in a redirect file. Test this file in a pre-production environment. Check each redirect with a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) before pushing to production.
Post-migration, monitor your positions and organic traffic daily for 6 weeks. Use Search Console to spot 404s that shouldn't exist. Each detected error = immediate correction. The response time makes all the difference between a successful migration and an SEO disaster.
These architectural projects can quickly become technical and time-consuming, especially on sites with thousands of pages. If you don't have the internal resources to manage a clean migration, hiring a specialized SEO agency can prevent costly mistakes — the time saved and risks avoided far outweigh the investment.
- Audit the consistency of your current structure before any decision
- Document your URL patterns in a centralized repository
- Never modify your URLs without a major business or technical reason
- If migrating: map 100% of URLs, test in pre-production, crawl before going live
- Monitor positions and traffic daily for 6 weeks post-migration
- Prioritize stability over theoretical optimization — a stable site beats a 'perfect' site in constant redesign
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle est la structure d'URL idéale pour le SEO selon Google ?
Peut-on changer la structure d'URL de son site sans perdre en SEO ?
La profondeur d'URL (nombre de slashes) impacte-t-elle le ranking ?
Faut-il inclure des mots-clés dans ses URLs pour mieux ranker ?
Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour digérer un changement de structure d'URLs ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 18/12/2020
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.