Official statement
Other statements from this video 25 ▾
- 1:41 Should you really use cross-domain canonicals to consolidate multiple thematic sites?
- 2:00 Do 302 redirects really pass PageRank like 301 redirects?
- 2:00 Does the canonical tag really transfer 100% of PageRank without any loss?
- 14:10 Should you really avoid setting all your outbound links to nofollow?
- 16:16 Is the URL Parameters Tool in Search Console a zombie or still useful for your SEO?
- 16:36 Does Google's URL Parameters tool still work even when its interface is broken?
- 20:01 Why does blocking robots.txt prevent noindex from working?
- 22:03 Are Core Web Vitals really the only speed criterion that counts for ranking?
- 23:03 Core Web Vitals: Why does Google ignore other performance metrics for Page Experience?
- 25:15 Do PageSpeed tests really mislead you about your Core Web Vitals?
- 26:50 Is alt text truly crucial for your visibility in Google Images?
- 26:50 Does alternative text for images really enhance SEO?
- 28:26 Do 302 redirects really pass as much PageRank as 301s?
- 30:17 Should you really hide cookie consent banners from Googlebot?
- 30:57 Should you really block cookie banners for Googlebot?
- 34:46 Why does Google still display old content in your meta descriptions?
- 34:46 Why does Google sometimes show your old meta descriptions in the SERPs?
- 36:57 Should you really show cookie banners to Googlebot?
- 37:56 Do 302 redirects really turn into 301s over time?
- 40:01 Should you really return a 404 for products that are permanently unavailable?
- 40:01 Should you return a 404 or a 200 on a product page that's out of stock?
- 43:37 Should you sync visible and technical dates to enhance your crawl?
- 43:38 Should you really differentiate between the visible date and the structured data date?
- 46:46 Why does Google still crawl your deleted old URLs?
- 47:09 Why does Google keep crawling your old 404 URLs?
Google claims that systematically placing all outbound links in nofollow does not violate its guidelines, but it may hinder your site's understanding in the web ecosystem. This practice complicates the analysis of how your content fits into the rest of the web. In practice, selective use of nofollow is recommended: reserve it for cases where it is justified (sponsored links, UGC, untrustworthy pages) rather than making it a blanket policy.
What you need to understand
Why does Google care about outbound links?
Outbound links are not just there to please the sites you are citing. Google uses them as contextual signals to understand your page's theme, editorial quality, and its place in the web graph.
A site that points to reliable and relevant sources sends a positive signal. Conversely, a site that puts all its links in nofollow voluntarily deprives itself of this semantic dimension — as if you wanted to participate in a conversation while refusing to mention anyone.
Does nofollow really block the transfer of PageRank?
Since 2020, Google treats nofollow as a hint rather than an absolute directive. This means that the algorithm can choose to follow the link and consider it for crawling or indexing, even though the transfer of PageRank is generally blocked.
Putting all your links in nofollow essentially obfuscates things: you tell Google, 'ignore everything', but the algorithm still has to guess what is worth following. This friction can slow down the understanding of your editorial structure.
What are legitimate cases for using nofollow?
Nofollow was designed for three specific scenarios: sponsored links (sponsored attribute), user-generated content (ugc attribute), and links to pages for which you do not want to take responsibility.
The mistake lies in extending this logic to all your outbound links 'just to be safe.' This defensive reflex — often inherited from old SEO beliefs — no longer has a technical justification today.
- Natural editorial links to reliable sources should remain dofollow
- Sponsored or affiliate links require the attribute rel="sponsored"
- Comments and forums should use rel="ugc"
- Links to dubious or temporary resources may justify a nofollow
- A systematic use of nofollow complicates the analysis of your thematic positioning
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, and it's one of the few points where official theory aligns with practice. Websites that practice systematic nofollow — often out of paranoia about 'PageRank leakage' — show no measurable gains, and some even experience positioning difficulties on competitive queries.
The myth that 'keeping your juice' improves ranking does not hold: Google values sites that integrate into an ecosystem, not those that behave like bunkers. A site that never cites anyone in dofollow sends a signal of editorial isolation.
What nuances should be considered in this recommendation?
Mueller speaks of a 'slight negative impact', which remains deliberately vague. No precise metrics, no magnitude order — typical of Google when it wants to avoid giving ammunition to spammers. [To verify]: the actual extent of this impact likely varies by industry and the density of outbound links.
Another nuance: this logic applies to standard editorial content. If you manage a directory, a comparison site, or a pure affiliate site, the situation changes. In these cases, massive nofollow use may be justified to avoid being classified as 'thin content' oriented towards manipulation.
When does this rule not apply?
Pure transactional sites (e-commerce without a blog) typically have few outgoing editorial links anyway — so the issue arises less. Similarly, UGC platforms (forums, wikis) rightly protect their outbound links via ugc or nofollow, which is actually recommended.
The real problem occurs with content sites that believe a dofollow outbound link 'weakens' their page. This is a fundamental misunderstanding of how the algorithm works: a relevant link to a quality source strengthens the credibility of your page, it does not dilute it.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do on an existing site?
Start with an audit of your outbound links. Identify strategic pages (pillars, top traffic) and list the nofollow links that have no reason to be so — typically, citations from official sources, studies, or reference organizations.
Then, reinstate dofollow on these legitimate editorial links. No need to tackle everything at once: prioritize pages with high business stakes. The goal is to show Google that your content relies on a network of credible sources.
What mistakes should be avoided in link attribute management?
Don't fall into the opposite excess: switching everything to dofollow is not the solution. Affiliate, sponsored, or links to untrustworthy sites should retain their nofollow or sponsored attribute. It's a matter of compliance with guidelines, not optimization.
Another pitfall: editorial inconsistency. If you cite a prestigious study in nofollow and an amateur blog in dofollow, it makes no sense. Google picks up on these inconsistencies, and they harm the understanding of your editorial line.
How can you check if your outbound link strategy is optimal?
Use a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) to extract all outgoing links and their attributes. Cross-reference with your editorial mapping: do pillar pages point to quality sources in dofollow? Are your commercial links correctly using the sponsored attribute?
Also monitor the evolution of your positioning on informational queries after modifications. If you had a systematic nofollow and you correct it, you should observe a subtle improvement in the thematic relevance perceived by Google — not a spectacular boost, but a stabilization or slight gain on niche queries.
- Audit the outbound links of 20-30 strategic pages on your site
- Identify legitimate editorial links currently in nofollow
- Reinstate dofollow on these links prioritizing pillar content
- Ensure all sponsored/affiliate links have the rel="sponsored" attribute
- Control editorial consistency: reliable sources in dofollow, remain in nofollow if justified
- Monitor the evolution of positioning on informational queries post-modification
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Perdre du PageRank via les liens sortants en dofollow est-il un vrai risque ?
Faut-il mettre en nofollow les liens vers ses propres pages internes ?
Les attributs sponsored et ugc ont-ils le même effet que nofollow ?
Un concurrent peut-il nuire à mon site en me linkant massivement en nofollow ?
Combien de liens sortants en dofollow par page est raisonnable ?
🎥 From the same video 25
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 53 min · published on 29/10/2020
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