Official statement
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Google is deploying algorithms to remove from its index pages that lack relevant or unique content, especially those displaying zero reviews or empty shells. This offensive directly targets sites that generate many poor URLs to cast a wide net in SEO. In practical terms, every indexed page must now justify its existence by providing real added value, or it faces outright removal.
What you need to understand
What does Google really mean by 'irrelevant content'?
Google is targeting technically indexable pages that provide no value to the user: product pages without descriptions, category pages without articles, review aggregators displaying '0 reviews', mass-generated landing pages with generic text. The engine is not referring to 404 errors or classic duplicate content but to functional yet hollow pages.
This statement is part of the ongoing Helpful Content Updates: Google wants to clean its index of URLs that exist solely to capture organic traffic without serving the search intent. Pages with 'zero reviews' are explicitly mentioned, a telling example for e-commerce or directory sites that generate thousands of empty URLs.
Why is this crackdown on empty pages happening now?
Google's crawl budget is not infinite. The more a site fills its index with junk pages, the more it dilutes the visibility of genuinely useful content. Google is optimizing its resources: crawling and indexing millions of empty pages is costly for zero user satisfaction.
SEOs have long exploited this loophole: creating hundreds of variations of category pages, filters, or empty listings to multiply entry points. Google indicates that this strategy is now risky. User frustration is highlighted: a click on an empty page degrades the experience and harms the engine's reputation.
Which types of sites are most exposed?
E-commerce sites with long-term out-of-stock product listings, review platforms that list thousands of establishments without customer feedback, job boards displaying expired offers; and automatically generated local directories. Any site that churns out URLs without verifying their real relevance is in the crosshairs.
Highly specialized niche sites are not spared: a blog with 50 categories but only 3 articles per category can end up with dozens of nearly empty category pages. Google does not pay attention to details: a blank page remains blank, regardless of the webmaster's initial intentions.
- 'Zero review' pages are explicitly targeted by Google as a typical example of frustrating content.
- Google's quality guidelines are invoked: these pages do not meet the minimum standards for usefulness.
- The algorithm automatically detects these pages, meaning measurable signals (bounce rate, time on page, absence of substantial textual content).
- Index removal is the penalty: these pages disappear from SERPs, sometimes without warning in Search Console.
- User frustration is the central argument: Google prioritizes the search experience first, not the crawl budget of SEOs.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. Since the last Core Updates, we have observed mass de-indexing of empty category pages, filters without results, and exhausted product listings. Poorly maintained e-commerce sites lose 30 to 50% of their indexed URLs without understanding why. Google is already applying this logic; the statement only formalizes an established practice.
The issue lies in the ambiguity of trigger thresholds. How many minimum words does a page need to be considered 'substantial'? What proportion of empty pages triggers an overall penalty? [To verify] Google gives no figures, leaving SEOs in uncertainty. We need to test, measure, and adjust without a clear benchmark.
What grey areas still exist in this policy?
Temporarily under construction pages: if a site launches a new category, the page exists but only has 2 products. Should it be noindexed for now? Google says nothing about the acceptable duration for a 'poor' page. Seasonal sites (like ski sales in summer) can have empty categories for 6 months of the year: are they penalized?
Another ambiguity: legitimate aggregative pages. Does a page 'Reviews of Restaurant X' with zero reviews today but expected to collect them tomorrow have the right to exist? Google claims to target 'frustrating' pages, but a user who wants to leave the first review is not frustrated by an empty page. The nuance is lacking.
In what cases does this rule not really apply?
News sites or forums with legitimate but sparsely populated discussion pages do not seem to be targeted. Google likely distinguishes between content 'awaiting interaction' and 'structurally empty' content. A forum page with 1 post of 3 lines remains indexable if it meets a specific query.
Pure transactional pages (contact forms, carts, confirmation pages) are not affected: they have a function, even without text. Google targets pages meant to inform or direct but that fail to do so. The challenge remains to define where to draw the line between 'poor' and 'effectively minimalist'.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize when auditing your site?
Run a complete crawl with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl and filter URLs by the number of unique content words. Anything with less than 100 words outside boilerplate deserves examination. Cross-reference with Analytics data: if a page has less than 150 words AND a bounce rate over 80%, it's a candidate for de-indexing.
Specifically check category pages, filters, and tags. How many products or articles do they actually display? A category with 2 products out of 50 total references is a red flag. The same goes for review pages: if you have a page 'Reviews of Y' with zero customer feedback, either noindex it or delete it.
How to restructure poor content without losing traffic?
Three options depending on the context: merge empty pages into richer parent categories, enrich with relevant editorial content (buying guides, FAQs, comparisons), or temporarily noindex while waiting for more material. Never leave a poor page indexed 'just in case'.
For e-commerce sites, implement a conditional logic: if stock = 0 for over 60 days, automatically switch to noindex. If a category drops below 5 products, redirect 301 to the parent category. Modern CMS platforms allow for these rules without heavy development. Automation is key for catalogs with thousands of references.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this compliance effort?
Do not stuff your empty pages with AI-generated generic text just to reach a word count threshold. Google detects padding, and you will worsen your situation. It's better to have a short but useful page than a hollow block of text. Don't blindly increase noindex tags either: you risk cutting off strategic crawl paths.
Avoid mass deletions without redirects. An empty page that still receives backlinks or direct traffic should be redirected to the nearest relevant resource, not thrown into a 404. Finally, do not neglect the Search Console: 'Excluded' messages for 'Crawled — currently not indexed' are often the first sign that Google deems your pages insufficient.
- Audit the number of unique words per page and identify URLs below the 100 words threshold.
- Cross-reference crawl data and Analytics to identify pages with high bounce rates and low engagement.
- Noindex or redirect category pages with fewer than 5 active items.
- Remove or enrich 'zero review' pages that have no immediate content prospects.
- Implement automatic rules for de-indexing product listings that are long-term out of stock.
- Monitor the Search Console for rising ‘Excluded' counts for 'Crawled — currently not indexed'.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de mots minimum faut-il pour qu'une page soit considérée comme substantielle par Google ?
Les pages "zéro avis" doivent-elles systématiquement être supprimées de l'index ?
Google pénalise-t-il tout le site si certaines pages sont vides, ou seulement ces pages ?
Comment savoir si mes pages ont été supprimées de l'index pour manque de contenu ?
Peut-on réindexer une page vide après l'avoir enrichie ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 22/04/2013
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