Official statement
Other statements from this video 45 ▾
- 1:01 Does every change to content or design really affect SEO rankings?
- 1:01 What impact can changing your site's design or content have on your rankings?
- 2:37 Do domain extensions (.com, .fr, .uk) really influence the weight of backlinks?
- 2:37 Do domain extensions (.com, .fr, .uk) really influence the value of backlinks?
- 4:06 Does redirecting your old pages to an archive really help preserve SEO?
- 4:13 Can redirecting to an archive section really help preserve the SEO of old pages?
- 5:16 Does blocking a folder via robots.txt kill the PageRank transfer to your strategic pages?
- 5:50 Should you block pages receiving backlinks with robots.txt?
- 6:27 Do links from old press releases really hold any SEO value?
- 6:54 Do links from old press releases really drag down your backlink profile?
- 7:59 How does Google truly detect duplicate content and why doesn't it seek the original?
- 9:29 Does Google really not care who published the original content?
- 10:03 Does content originality really ensure top rankings on Google?
- 13:42 Do domain migration problems amplify the impact of Core Updates?
- 13:46 Are site migrations really as risky as they seem?
- 20:28 How long does it really take for a domain migration to stabilize in Google?
- 22:06 Are domain migrations really risk-free according to Google?
- 26:14 Should you really delay your SEO changes during a Core Update?
- 27:27 Should you really update all backlinks after a domain migration?
- 29:00 Should you really check a domain's history before purchasing it for an SEO migration?
- 31:01 Why does Google maintain SafeSearch filtering even after migrating to clean content?
- 32:03 Do you really need the address change tool to migrate between subdomains?
- 32:03 Should you really use the address change tool when migrating between subdomains?
- 33:10 Are Web Stories really indexable like regular pages?
- 33:10 Can Web Stories really rank like traditional pages?
- 36:04 Do AMP errors really harm Google rankings, or is it just a myth?
- 36:24 Do AMP errors really affect your Google ranking?
- 37:49 How does cleaning up your URL structure really enhance the ranking of your strategic pages?
- 38:00 How can cleaning up your URL structure solve your ranking problems?
- 39:36 Is it true that hidden text for accessibility is penalized by Google?
- 39:36 Does hidden text for accessibility really harm your site's SEO?
- 41:10 Why do your impressions skyrocket on certain days in Search Console?
- 42:45 How can you implement paywall schema when conducting A/B tests with multiple variations?
- 44:03 Should you really show the complete content to Googlebot if the paywall blocks users?
- 48:00 Does Google really rewrite your titles to boost clicks without affecting rankings?
- 48:07 Does Google rewrite your titles to manipulate your click-through rates?
- 49:49 Should you really stuff your titles with every keyword variation?
- 50:50 Is it true that Google rewrites your title tags, and how can you ensure your original version gets displayed?
- 51:56 Does a modified HTML title lose its ranking power in the SERPs?
- 65:39 Should you really stop optimizing for synonymous keywords?
- 65:39 Should you stop optimizing for synonyms and geographical variations?
- 67:16 Why does Google consistently block rich results for adult sites?
- 67:16 Can adult sites actually display rich results on Google?
- 68:48 Does SafeSearch really filter the entire domain if only a part contains adult content?
- 69:08 Can an adult domain host non-adult sections without penalizing the entire site?
Google states that boilerplate duplicate content—such as legal notices, disclaimers, and general terms of sale—does not negatively impact rankings. The algorithm automatically weighs these repetitive elements to assess the site's unique content. For SEO practitioners, this means it’s time to stop worrying about these technical duplications and to focus efforts on differentiated editorial content.
What you need to understand
What exactly does Google mean by "boilerplate text"?
Boilerplate content refers to standardized text elements that repeat from one page to another, often due to legal or practical obligations. Specifically: legal notices, general terms of sale, regulatory disclaimers, privacy policies, informative footers.
This text appears identical on thousands of sites because it is copied from legal templates or because legislation requires a specific formulation. A law firm copying the GDPR clauses from an online generator is not doing anything objectionable in Google's eyes.
Why doesn’t Google penalize this duplicate content?
The reason is simple: nobody searches for this content. An internet user who types "legal notices law firm Paris" into Google is looking to access a notice page, not to compare the quality of writing of those notices. The search intent is never about the uniqueness of these texts.
Google has developed algorithms capable of detection and automatic weighting of these repetitive sections. The engine isolates the unique editorial content from the rest, assesses its relevance, and gives little weight to the boilerplate in the ranking calculation. This is differentiated treatment, not a penalty.
Does this tolerance apply to all types of duplicate content?
No, and that’s where many sites hit a snag. Google clearly distinguishes unwanted boilerplate content from duplicated editorial content. If you copy product descriptions, blog articles, or advice sheets—essentially anything a user might actively search for—you step outside the tolerance zone.
The difference lies in user intent. Legal text meets a transparency obligation, not a search query. A product description directly addresses a commercial intent. Google treats these two cases radically differently.
- Legal or technical boilerplate (terms of sale, notices, GDPR disclaimers) is tolerated because it’s not actively sought
- Automatic weighting allows Google to assess unique content even in the presence of repetitive sections
- Duplicated editorial content (descriptions, articles, advice sheets) remains problematic because it meets search intents
- The key distinction relies on what the user is genuinely searching for in the search engine
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
On paper, yes. In practice, it’s more nuanced. We do observe that sites with massive footers copied on every page (contact info, hours, disclaimers) do not suffer any visible penalties. E-commerce sites with standard terms and conditions typically rank well.
But beware: Google never specifies where the "acceptable boilerplate" ends and where "problematic duplicate editorial content" begins. This gray area creates ambiguous situations. Take a real estate agency site with a standard paragraph on "our services" copied across 200 property pages. Is that boilerplate? Editorial content? [To be verified] — Google does not provide a set threshold.
What are the limits of this algorithmic tolerance?
First point: the unique content to boilerplate ratio likely matters. If your page contains 100 words of unique content and 800 words of legal notices, Google will be able to isolate the 100 words... but giving weight to that popular text becomes mechanically more difficult in a sea of repetitive text.
Second point: this tolerance clearly does not apply to syndicated texts or copy-pasted supplier product descriptions. This content responds to a direct search intent—the user is looking to understand a product or compare offers. The duplication becomes toxic for rankings.
When might this rule play against you?
A concrete observed case: a site with very thin pages of unique content (50-80 words) but with 300-word footers repeated everywhere. Result: wasted crawl budget, erratic indexing, poor rankings. Even if Google "weights" the footer, the page offers little exploitable content.
Another pitfall: confusing "tolerated" with "optimal". Yes, Google will not penalize you for copied terms and conditions. No, that does not mean piling on boilerplate text is a good strategy. Every page element consumes crawl budget, dilutes semantic density, and slows loading. Algorithmic tolerance is not an excuse to neglect editorial architecture.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do with boilerplate content?
First, clearly identify what falls under boilerplate in your architecture. Legal notices, terms and conditions, privacy policies, regulatory disclaimers: leave them as they are if you copied them from a standard template. There’s no need to reinvent the legal wheel to please Google.
Next, minimize the presence of this text on high SEO stakes pages. Place your terms and conditions in the footer with a simple link, avoid displaying 500 words of legal notices in the middle of a product sheet. The goal: maximize the unique content to repetitive content ratio on each strategic page.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
A classic mistake: confusing boilerplate and editorial content. A paragraph "About our company" copied across 300 pages is NOT tolerated boilerplate—it’s duplicated editorial content. If a user could search for that information ("services from agency X", "expertise of firm Y"), then Google treats it as content, not as boilerplate.
Another pitfall: using this tolerance as an excuse to neglect editorial uniqueness. Just because Google accepts your copied terms and conditions does not excuse you from producing unique and distinguishing content on your main pages. The algorithm weighs boilerplate, but it still evaluates everything else—and it’s that remaining content that determines your ranking.
How can you check if your site correctly leverages this tolerance?
Start with a ratio audit. On your strategic pages, measure the volume of unique content versus the volume of repetitive text (footers, disclaimers, standardized blocks). If the ratio goes below 50% unique content, you have a problem with semantic dilution.
Then test differentiated indexing. Perform a search site:yourdomain.com with snippets from your unique content, then with snippets from boilerplate. If Google is massively indexing your pages based on the boilerplate text rather than on the unique content, that’s a warning signal—you may not be providing enough distinctive material.
- Clearly isolate legal/technical content (terms, notices) from editorial content
- Place boilerplate in the footer or on dedicated pages rather than in the middle of strategic pages
- Never copy "About" or "Our services" paragraphs on dozens of pages
- Measure the unique content to repetitive content ratio on SEO-critical pages
- Ensure Google is indexing your pages based on unique content, not boilerplate
- Prioritize editorial uniqueness on pages that generate organic traffic
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les CGV et mentions légales copiées depuis un modèle nuisent-elles au référencement ?
Peut-on copier les descriptions produit fournisseur sans risque pour le SEO ?
Quel est le ratio acceptable entre contenu unique et texte passe-partout ?
Un footer volumineux répété sur toutes les pages pose-t-il problème ?
Comment savoir si mon contenu est considéré comme du boilerplate ou du contenu éditorial ?
🎥 From the same video 45
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 11/12/2020
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