Official statement
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Google claims that disavow files are processed continuously and influence all link-based algorithms, including Penguin. This means that a well-crafted disavow should produce effects without waiting for a major algorithm update. The question remains whether this continuity is real or if some unavoidable delays still exist.
What you need to understand
Does continuous disavow processing replace the old Penguin updates?
Since the integration of Penguin into Google's main algorithm, the era of large, spaced-out updates is officially over. Before this integration, a penalized site had to wait several months for a new Penguin wave to see the effects of link cleaning. Now, Google claims that the processing of disavow files occurs on a continuous basis.
This statement from Mueller aims to reassure practitioners: submitting a disavow.txt file should no longer confine you to months of waiting. However, “continuous processing” does not mean “immediate effect.” The file must first be read, then the disavowed links must be recrawled and reevaluated. If your toxic backlinks are on pages rarely visited by Googlebot, the delay can stretch out.
Are all link-based algorithms really affected?
Mueller explicitly mentions “all link-based algorithms,” not just Penguin. This therefore includes internal PageRank calculation, domain authority signals, and potentially broader anti-spam systems. In theory, disavowing a link should influence both your spam profile and your internal authority distribution.
Nevertheless, this wording is deliberately vague. Google never details how many distinct algorithms handle links or their respective weights. Claiming a disavow acts “everywhere” does not tell us to what extent or with what propagation delay. It’s a promise of consistency, not an instruction manual.
What’s the difference between “continuously processed” and “real-time considered”?
“Continuously processed” means that Google does not store your disavow files in a queue for monthly batch processing. But this does not guarantee that the impact on your rankings is instantaneous. The file must be integrated into the index, the source pages of the links need to be recrawled, and signals must propagate through the link graph.
In practice, expect a timeline of several days to several weeks depending on the crawl frequency of the affected domains. If you disavow a link on a site that Googlebot visits every hour, the effect will be quick. If it’s a dormant directory crawled once a quarter, you will have to wait. The “continuous” refers to the process on Google’s side, not your perception on the practitioner’s side.
- Penguin is integrated in real-time: no need to wait for a manual update to see an effect.
- The disavow file is processed continuously: Google reads it regularly, not in monthly batches.
- The effect depends on recrawl: a disavowed link only disappears from the equation once the source page is recrawled.
- All link algorithms are involved: not just spam detection, but also authority calculation.
- The delay remains variable: from a few days to several weeks depending on the freshness of source pages.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this promise of continuity consistent with ground observations?
In practice, the majority of practitioners actually observe a gradual disappearance of penalties after a well-calibrated disavow, without waiting for a large algorithm update. This aligns with Mueller's announcement. However, the delays remain very heterogeneous: some sites regain positions in a week, while others wait two months. [To be verified]: Google provides no public metrics on the median time for processing, making any generalization risky.
The real question is whether all types of links are treated with the same speed. A link from a news site crawled continuously will be neutralized quickly. A link from a footer of a ghost directory may remain active for months in the index if Google has no reason to recrawl it. The “continuous” does not erase the inequalities in crawl priority.
Should we still use disavow or just wait for Google to ignore bad links?
Google has been claiming for years that it can identify and automatically ignore most low-quality links. So why disavow? Because “most” does not mean “all.” Some artificial link profiles (mass spam, aggressive PBNs, overly optimized anchors) can still trigger manual actions or weigh negatively.
The disavow remains an insurance policy. If you have inherited a dubious history, suffered a negative SEO attack, or are cleaning up after a discarded black hat strategy, the disavow.txt file remains your best ally. Not using it by principle is akin to betting that Google will detect everything on its own, which is far from guaranteed.
Do all link algorithms react similarly to disavow?
Mueller talks about “link-based” algorithms, but each likely has a different refreshing logic. Penguin evaluates spam, PageRank calculation distributes authority, anti-manipulation systems detect artificial patterns. Disavowing a link can quickly neutralize a spam signal, but authority redistribution within the internal graph can take longer.
In practice, you might observe a penalty disappearance (position rebound) before your perceived authority score stabilizes. This is normal: removing negative noise is faster than recalibrating a positive balance. If you disavow massively without compensating with clean links, you might even risk a temporary drop due to net authority loss.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do after submitting a disavow file?
Once your disavow.txt file is uploaded to the Search Console, the first step is to wait for the next crawl cycle of the source pages. You can speed up the process by requesting a reindexing of the most critical URLs via the URL inspection tool, but Google does not guarantee any timeline. Monitor your positions and organic traffic daily for at least three weeks.
Meanwhile, document all disavowed links in a spreadsheet with their submission date, type (spam, PBN, overly optimized anchor), and referring domain. This will allow you to correlate position variations with the effective processing of certain link blocks. If no improvements appear after a month, reassess your file: did you disavow the right domains, or did you aim too broadly risking the loss of real signals?
What mistakes should be avoided when setting up a disavow strategy?
The first mistake is to disavow blindly all links that seem suspicious. A link from a small thematic blog with low authority is not necessarily toxic. If you disavow massively, you risk neutralizing useful thematic relevance signals. Prefer a surgical approach: target clearly spammy domains, detected site networks, and repeated overly optimized anchors.
Second mistake: forgetting to update the file regularly. If you suffer a negative SEO attack or new dubious links appear, your initial file won't suffice. Plan for a quarterly audit of your backlink profile and add new toxic domains as they arise. disavow is not a one-time act, it requires continuous hygiene.
How can you verify that the disavow is producing the expected effect?
The only reliable indicator is the evolution of your positions on strategic keywords. If you were penalized by Penguin, you should observe a gradual rebound on the queries where you had dropped. Watch out for false positives: a rise could also result from a classic algorithm update, on-page improvements, or decreased competition. Compare several keyword segments and isolate the effects.
Also use the link reports in Search Console to check that disavowed domains no longer appear in your active backlinks after a few weeks. If a disavowed domain remains listed, it means Google has not yet recrawled it or considers that the link has no weight anyway. In this case, do not worry: the disavow remains active even if the link still appears in the report.
- Upload your disavow.txt file via the Search Console and document the submission date.
- Request reindexing of critical source pages via the URL inspection tool to accelerate processing.
- Monitor your positions on strategic keywords daily for at least three weeks.
- Disavow only clearly toxic domains: spam, PBN, mass overly optimized anchors.
- Update your file quarterly to incorporate new dubious links.
- Compare the evolution of several keyword segments to isolate the real effect of the disavow.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'un fichier de désaveu produise un effet visible ?
Faut-il désavouer au niveau du domaine ou de l'URL ?
Peut-on annuler un désaveu si on s'est trompé ?
Le désaveu affecte-t-il le calcul du PageRank et de l'autorité de domaine ?
Doit-on désavouer préventivement les liens suspects même sans pénalité avérée ?
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