Official statement
Other statements from this video 41 ▾
- 3:48 Does Google really automatically ignore irrelevant URL parameters?
- 3:48 Why does Google ignore certain URL parameters and how does it choose its canonical version?
- 4:34 Does Google really ignore non-essential URL parameters on your site?
- 8:48 Are errors 405 and soft 404 truly handled the same way by Google?
- 8:48 Do soft 404s really trigger deindexing without a penalty?
- 10:08 Should you really prefer a soft 404 over a 405 error for removed Flash content?
- 17:06 Does submitting multiple Google reconsideration requests really speed up the review of your site?
- 18:07 Do manual actions for unnatural outbound links really affect a site's ranking?
- 18:08 Do penalties on outbound links really impact your site's ranking?
- 18:08 Should you really set all your outbound links to nofollow to protect your SEO?
- 19:42 Should you really set all your outbound links to nofollow to protect your PageRank?
- 22:23 Does Google always show your images in search results?
- 22:23 How does Google decide which images to display in search results?
- 23:58 How long does it take to recover traffic after a 301 redirect bug?
- 24:04 Can a bug restoring your old URLs kill your SEO?
- 24:08 Why does Google aggressively recrawl your site after a migration?
- 27:47 Should you index a new URL before redirecting an old one in a 301?
- 28:18 Is it really necessary to wait for indexing before redirecting a URL in 301?
- 34:02 Why does the mobile-friendly test produce conflicting results on the same page?
- 37:14 Why should WebPageTest be your go-to tool for web performance diagnostics?
- 37:54 Are H1 titles really essential for ranking your pages?
- 38:06 Are H1 and H2 tags really important for Google ranking?
- 39:58 Is it true that structured data makes a difference based on whether it's implemented with a plugin or manually?
- 39:58 Should you manually code your structured data or opt for a WordPress plugin?
- 41:04 Should you really be worried about a 503 error on your site for a few hours?
- 41:04 Can a 503 error truly harm your site's SEO?
- 43:15 Why are your FAQ rich snippets disappearing despite technically valid markup?
- 43:15 Why are your rich results disappearing from regular SERPs while they technically work?
- 43:15 Why do your rich snippets vanish even when your markup is technically correct?
- 47:02 Why does Search Console show indexed URLs that are missing from the sitemap?
- 48:04 Should you really modify the lastmod of the sitemap to speed up recrawling after fixing missing tags?
- 48:04 Should you modify the lastmod date in the sitemap after simply correcting a meta title or description?
- 50:43 Is it normal for the Rich Results report in Search Console to remain empty despite valid markup?
- 50:43 Why is Google showing fewer of your FAQs as rich results?
- 50:43 Is it true that your validated FAQ markup might be invisible in Search Console?
- 51:17 Why is Google showing fewer FAQs in rich results now?
- 54:21 Why does Google choose a canonical URL in the wrong language for your multilingual content?
- 54:21 Does Googlebot really ignore your multilingual site's accept-language header?
- 54:21 Can Google really tell the difference between your multilingual pages, or is it at risk of mistakenly canonicalizing them?
- 57:01 Is Google really tolerant of hreflang errors that mismatch language and content?
- 57:14 Does Googlebot really send an accept-language header during crawling?
Google states that temporary technical issues — unstable redirects, URLs that change and then revert — do not lead to lasting penalties. Once the issue is resolved and the pages re-indexed, the site regains its normal ranking potential. Specifically, your temporary errors leave no negative trace in your domain's history.
What you need to understand
What does "no lasting negative sentiment" really mean?
Mueller uses an unusual phrasing: "negative sentiment". He personifies the algorithms to convey a simple message: Google holds no grudges. Ranking systems do not apply a permanent penalty when a site experiences temporary technical turbulence.
This statement comes in a context where many SEOs fear that a temporary error leaves an algorithmic scar. A failed migration, an SSL certificate that expires for a few hours, accidental 302 redirects lasting a day — all these incidents generate anxiety. Mueller confirms that these accidents do not poison the relationship between your site and the algorithms in the long term.
What types of technical bugs are covered by this tolerance?
The statement specifically targets reversible issues: redirects that come and go, URLs that change and then revert to their original state. These are not structurally poor SEO decisions — a redesign that loses 40% of internal linking, systemic cannibalization — but rather temporary incidents.
The common point of these bugs: they resolve themselves and the site returns to its normal technical state. Once Googlebot recrawls the corrected pages and indexing stabilizes, ranking can bounce back without dragging a weight. No negative "memory" in the system.
What happens during the bug period?
While the technical issue is active, your site does indeed suffer a degradation. If your URLs randomly return 302s or if your architecture flips between two contradictory states, Google will stop understanding which version to index. Your visibility drops.
But once the issue is corrected, the counter resets to zero. Google re-indexes, reassesses the signals, and your site can regain its positions — provided that the SEO fundamentals remain intact (content, backlinks, authority). This is the crucial nuance: no lasting penalty, but no guarantee of instant recovery either.
- Temporary bugs do not create a permanent penalty in the algorithmic history of the domain
- Recovery requires a complete re-indexation of corrected pages — which can take time depending on crawl frequency
- The ranking potential remains intact if quality signals (content, links, authority) have not deteriorated during the incident
- This tolerance applies to accidental technical incidents, not to structurally bad SEO decisions that persist
- Google does not differentiate between sites based on size — all benefit from this approach, including small domains
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, but with a significant caveat: the speed of recovery varies greatly. I've seen sites regain their positions in 10-15 days after fixing a redirect bug, and others stagnate for 2 months. The difference? Crawl frequency and the domain's authority level.
A site with a high crawl budget — because it publishes frequently, has good fresh backlinks, and generates traffic — will be recrawled quickly. Google quickly detects that the problem is resolved. A small site with monthly crawling will wait much longer. [To be verified]: Mueller does not specify whether Google actively speeds up recrawl after detecting a fix, or if it is purely passive.
What nuances should we add to this reassuring statement?
First nuance: temporary, what does that really mean? Mueller does not provide a threshold. A bug lasting 3 hours, OK. But a problem that drags on for 6 weeks, even if it eventually gets fixed, can have lasting indirect consequences — loss of traffic, drop in conversion, decrease in user signals that can affect ranking.
Second critical nuance: no penalty does not mean guaranteed recovery. If during your technical incident, your competitors have published fresh content, gained backlinks, improved their UX, you will not mechanically regain your positions. You recover your ranking potential, not a frozen position in time.
When does this rule not apply?
This tolerance covers accidental bugs, not prolonged poor SEO choices. If you decide to switch your entire site to 302 for 3 months "for testing", Google will not consider that an innocent temporary incident. It will interpret your signals as definitive and act accordingly.
Another excluded case: technical problems that measurably degrade user experience. If your temporary bug has dramatically increased your bounce rate, degraded your Core Web Vitals for several weeks, Google has recorded these negative signals. They do not disappear instantly once the bug is fixed — behavioral metrics also need to recover.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do when detecting a temporary technical bug?
Fix quickly, document, and force recrawl. Do not let an issue linger by thinking "Google forgives". The longer the bug lasts, the more collateral damage it generates — loss of traffic, degraded user signals, broken links in third-party tools.
Once the fix is deployed, submit the corrected URLs via Search Console to speed up re-indexation. If the bug has affected hundreds of URLs, submit an updated XML sitemap and monitor the coverage reports. Don’t rely on Googlebot's patience — help it see that everything is back to normal.
How to check if recovery is underway?
Monitor three indicators in Search Console: indexed pages (Coverage section), crawl errors, and the evolution of impressions/clicks. If your corrected pages are indexed but impressions don’t rise after 3-4 weeks, the problem may not be purely technical.
Also check that your Core Web Vitals have not been degraded during the incident. A bug that slowed your site for 2 weeks can leave traces in CrUX metrics — and that impacts ranking regardless of the initial technical bug. Google does not penalize the bug but will penalize poor performance.
What mistakes to avoid after fixing a technical incident?
Do not panic and multiply changes. I've seen SEOs fix a redirect bug and then, worried about not seeing immediate recovery, change their URL structure, overhaul their internal linking, change their title tags — all within 10 days. Result: Google doesn’t know what to make of it, and ranking remains stuck.
Another common mistake: not monitoring backlinks during and after the incident. If your bug broke URLs that third-party sites linked to, and those sites removed or altered their links, you've lost juice. This is not a "temporary issue with no impact" — it's real damage that requires repair link building.
- Fix the technical bug as soon as detected — every day counts to limit collateral damage
- Submit the corrected URLs via Search Console to accelerate recrawl and re-indexation
- Monitor coverage and crawl reports to ensure Google adequately acknowledges the fix
- Check that Core Web Vitals have not deteriorated during the incident — if so, fix those signals too
- Monitor the evolution of impressions/clicks over 3-4 weeks to evaluate the actual recovery of ranking
- Audit backlinks post-resolution to detect any loss of links caused by broken URLs
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un bug de redirection qui dure 2 semaines peut-il faire perdre définitivement des positions ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer son ranking après correction d'un bug temporaire ?
Google fait-il la différence entre un bug accidentel et une mauvaise décision SEO prolongée ?
Un bug technique peut-il entraîner une perte de backlinks permanente ?
Faut-il attendre passivement que Google recrawle après avoir corrigé un bug ?
🎥 From the same video 41
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 11/08/2020
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