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Official statement

Invalid structured data on a page does not lead to its removal from the index. It affects neither crawling, nor indexing, nor ranking. Google simply reports the error if you wish to use these structured data.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 21/01/2022 ✂ 21 statements
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Other statements from this video 20
  1. Les liens internes dans le header ou le footer ont-ils moins de valeur SEO ?
  2. Google pénalise-t-il vraiment un site qui achète des liens en masse ?
  3. Faut-il vraiment viser la perfection technique pour bien ranker sur Google ?
  4. Pourquoi Google crawle-t-il moins votre site s'il le trouve de mauvaise qualité ?
  5. Le statut « Crawlée, actuellement non indexée » est-il vraiment un signal de qualité insuffisante ?
  6. Faut-il s'inquiéter d'une baisse du nombre de pages indexées ?
  7. Crawlée non indexée vs Découverte non indexée : vraiment équivalent ?
  8. Peut-on vraiment contrôler les images affichées dans les snippets Google ?
  9. Pourquoi Google pénalise-t-il le contenu dupliqué entre sites de franchises ?
  10. CCTLD, sous-domaine ou sous-répertoire : quelle structure pour le géociblage international ?
  11. Le code 503 protège-t-il vraiment vos pages de la désindexation en cas de panne ?
  12. Les liens dofollow accidentels dans vos RP vont-ils vous pénaliser ?
  13. Peut-on vraiment utiliser l'outil de changement d'adresse pour fusionner ou diviser des sites ?
  14. Pourquoi vos données structurées disparaissent-elles sur vos pages localisées ?
  15. Les données structurées améliorent-elles vraiment le référencement ou juste l'affichage ?
  16. Google va-t-il un jour afficher les Core Web Vitals directement dans les résultats de recherche ?
  17. Restructuration d'URL : pourquoi Google provoque-t-il des fluctuations pendant deux mois ?
  18. Le linking interne surpasse-t-il vraiment la structure d'URL pour le SEO ?
  19. Faut-il vraiment calculer le PageRank interne pour optimiser son site ?
  20. Google peut-il vraiment identifier la langue principale d'une page multilingue sans pénaliser votre SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (4 years ago)
TL;DR

Invalid structured data does not result in any penalty to the crawling, indexing, or ranking of your pages. Google simply reports the error in Search Console if you want to leverage this data for rich results. In other words: a markup error will not cause your rankings to drop.

What you need to understand

Why does Google clarify that markup errors do not impact SEO?

Historically, many SEO practitioners feared that a defective implementation of structured data could harm a page's ranking. This statement from Mueller clears up any ambiguity: a syntax error in your JSON-LD, a poorly defined Schema type, or a missing attribute will never trigger an algorithmic penalty.

Google treats structured data as an optional enrichment layer. If the markup is invalid, the search engine simply ignores this layer and continues to crawl, index, and rank the page normally — as if the markup did not exist.

What is the difference between "invalid" and "unrecognized"?

Structured data that is invalid contains syntax errors or does not comply with Schema.org specifications (missing property, incorrect type, poorly formatted value). Data that is unrecognized, on the other hand, is technically correct but covers a type or property that Google does not use to generate rich results.

In both cases, the organic SEO impact is zero. The only difference: valid but unrecognized data generates neither an error in Search Console nor a rich result. Invalid data generates an alert but remains without consequence for ranking.

What are the key takeaways?

  • Structured data errors do not affect crawling, indexing, or ranking of your pages.
  • Google reports these errors in Search Console only to allow you to correct the markup and access rich results.
  • A page without structured data and a page with invalid data are treated the same way by the ranking algorithm.
  • Valid structured data can improve SERP visibility (rich snippets, carousels, knowledge panels) but is not a direct ranking factor.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

In principle, yes. I have never observed a drop in rankings directly correlated with markup errors. Sites that correct their Schema data errors generally do not gain organic positions — they gain SERP visibility through rich snippets, which is different.

However, we need to nuance this: if your markup is so broken that it triggers critical JavaScript errors blocking page rendering, then yes, you will see an SEO impact. But this is no longer a matter of invalid structured data — it is a problem of technical availability of content.

What nuances should we add to this claim?

Mueller is talking about structured data in isolation. Let's be honest: in reality, a markup error often reveals a broader quality issue. A site that accumulates hundreds of Schema.org errors generally has other concerns (malformed HTML, poorly managed JavaScript, degraded UX).

What affects ranking is not the Schema errors themselves, but the degraded technical context in which they appear. [To be verified]: it would be interesting to measure whether Google considers overall markup quality as an indirect technical quality signal — but nothing suggests that this is the case today.

When does this rule not apply?

Mueller's statement covers passive markup errors. It does not apply if you attempt to manipulate rich results with misleading or spam structured data (fake reviews, fictitious prices, non-existent events).

In these cases, Google can apply a manual action targeting rich results — or, in extreme cases, a broader penalty if the spam is systematic. This is no longer a matter of technical validity, but editorial compliance.

Warning: do not confuse "absence of penalty" with "uselessness". Correcting your structured data errors remains essential to access advanced SERP features — it is just that your organic ranking will not change.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do about structured data errors?

Prioritize based on business objective. If you are targeting rich results (review stars, FAQs, recipes, events), then correct all errors reported in Search Console. If these rich snippets are not strategic for you, the errors can wait — they do not harm your organic search rankings.

Use Google's rich results test and Search Console to identify blocking errors. Focus first on markup types that have a proven SERP impact in your sector (Product, Review, FAQ, HowTo, Recipe, Event).

What errors should you avoid when managing structured data?

Do not fall into the opposite trap: implementing structured data everywhere "just in case". Poorly thought-out or generic markup brings nothing and dilutes your semantic signal. Better to have 3 perfectly implemented Schema types than 15 poorly done ones.

Also avoid correcting errors without understanding their root cause. If your CMS automatically generates invalid markup, fix the source, not the symptoms page by page. Otherwise, you will enter an endless correction cycle with every publication.

How can you verify that your implementation is optimal?

  • Audit your structured data with the rich results test and the Search Console URL inspection tool.
  • Verify that the Schema types used match your SERP objectives (no unnecessary markup).
  • Check consistency between visible content and structured data — any divergence can be interpreted as misleading.
  • Set up automatic monitoring of Schema errors via the Search Console API to detect regressions after each deployment.
  • Test the real SERP impact of corrections: some corrected errors will never activate a rich snippet if Google does not deem the content relevant.
Invalid structured data does not penalize your search rankings, but correcting these errors remains strategic for maximizing your SERP visibility. If you manage a complex site with hundreds of pages and automatic markup generation systems, auditing and optimizing structured data can quickly become technical. In these situations, working with a specialized SEO agency allows you to guarantee clean, maintainable implementation aligned with your business priorities.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une erreur de données structurées peut-elle faire chuter mes positions dans Google ?
Non. Google affirme clairement qu'une erreur de markup n'affecte ni le crawl, ni l'indexation, ni le classement. Seule conséquence : vous n'aurez pas accès aux résultats enrichis tant que l'erreur persiste.
Dois-je corriger toutes les erreurs signalées dans la Search Console ?
Cela dépend de vos objectifs. Si vous visez des rich snippets (étoiles, FAQ, recettes), corrigez-les. Si ces fonctionnalités ne sont pas prioritaires pour vous, ces erreurs peuvent attendre — elles ne nuisent pas au SEO organique.
Peut-on être pénalisé pour des données structurées trompeuses ?
Oui. Si vous utilisez des données structurées pour tromper (fausses reviews, prix fictifs), Google peut appliquer une action manuelle. Mais ce n'est pas une question de validité technique, c'est une question de conformité éditoriale.
Les données structurées sont-elles un facteur de classement ?
Non. Les données structurées valides peuvent améliorer votre visibilité SERP via les résultats enrichis, mais elles ne sont pas un signal de ranking direct. Elles aident Google à mieux comprendre le contenu, sans influencer le positionnement organique.
Vaut-il mieux avoir des données structurées invalides ou pas de données du tout ?
Du point de vue SEO organique, c'est strictement équivalent. Google traitera la page de la même façon. En revanche, des données invalides génèrent des alertes dans la Search Console, ce qui peut brouiller votre monitoring.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing Structured Data AI & SEO Pagination & Structure

🎥 From the same video 20

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 21/01/2022

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