Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
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- 70:28 Is it true that content hidden behind a 'Read More' button is actually indexed by Google?
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- 111:39 Why Doesn't the Search Console API Show Referring URLs for 404 Errors?
- 144:15 Why does Google keep crawling 404 URLs that are years old?
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- 293:25 Do Invisible Breadcrumbs Really Block Your Rich Results on Google?
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- 347:05 Is it true that word count doesn't matter for ranking on Google?
- 347:05 Is the number of words really a ranking factor for Google?
- 400:17 Does the traffic volume of your site affect your Core Web Vitals score?
- 415:20 Does traffic volume really influence your Core Web Vitals?
- 420:26 Does content relevance truly outweigh Core Web Vitals in Google rankings?
- 422:01 Can Core Web Vitals Really Boost Your Ranking Without Relevant Content?
- 510:42 Is it true that Google can't always show the right local version of your site?
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- 574:05 Does PageSpeed Insights really measure your site's performance?
- 598:16 Is it really possible to shift from long-tail to short-tail without changing strategy?
- 616:26 Can you really hide dates from Google search results?
- 649:38 Does Google really rewrite your titles to help you out?
- 650:37 Can you really stop Google from rewriting your title tags?
- 688:58 Should you really report SERP bugs with generic queries to expect a response from Google?
- 870:33 Should new e-commerce sites prove their legitimacy outside of Google first?
- 937:08 Is it true that the length of the title really impacts Google rankings?
- 940:42 Is it true that the length of title tags really impacts Google's rankings?
Google confirms that the displayed date in the SERPs does not directly influence page rankings. Therefore, artificially manipulating this date to appear more recent is futile from an algorithmic standpoint. However, this date remains an important signal for users, some of whom may prefer fresh content based on their search intent — and the CTR, in turn, indirectly impacts your visibility.
What you need to understand
What exactly does 'the date is not a ranking factor' mean?
When Mueller states that the displayed date is not a ranking factor, he specifically refers to the data visible in search results. Google does not mechanically boost a page simply because it shows 'Published 2 days ago' instead of 'Published in 2019'.
However, the algorithm can still value the actual freshness of content through other signals: crawl frequency, substantial changes detected, social signals, or behavioral signals. The nuance is essential — the visible date in the snippet is merely a reflection, not the ranking mechanism itself.
Where does this confusion around dates come from?
Years of SEO tweaks have ingrained the idea that a recent date = better ranking. Some CMS platforms automatically update the modification date whenever a comma is corrected, creating a false sense of freshness without added value.
Google had to clarify this because this practice became widespread, polluting the SERPs with artificially 'refreshed' content. The result: users can no longer distinguish a genuine update from a mere repaint, degrading the ecosystem.
So why does Google still display this date?
Because for the user, the date remains a contextual relevance indicator. Someone searching for 'new tax rules' wants 2025 content, not 2017. Someone looking for 'beef bourguignon recipe' doesn't care about the date.
Google thus lets users judge if freshness matters for their query. It acts as a quick cognitive filter — and if many internet users systematically snub dated content for certain queries, the CTR will drop, which ultimately affects rankings. But that impact is indirect.
- The visible date in the SERPs neither boosts nor penalizes a URL directly.
- The actual freshness of the content can be valued through other algorithmic signals (crawl, substantial modifications, user behavior).
- Artificially modifying a date without improving the content does not yield any measurable SEO gains.
- User CTR can be affected by the displayed date based on search intent, creating an indirect impact on visibility.
- Google extracts the date from structured data (schema.org), meta tags, or content — it’s better if it reflects reality.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes and no. For QDF (Query Deserves Freshness) queries — news, volatile topics, legislation — empirical observations show that Google favors recent content. But Mueller is right: it’s not the displayed date that does the work; it’s a whole array of freshness signals (frequent crawling, buzz, fresh external mentions).
On the other hand, for evergreen or technical topics, tweaking the date makes no difference. We’ve tested it: republishing an article with a new date without changing the content does not shift the needle. The only observable effect? Sometimes a slight temporary boost in CTR if the user is explicitly searching for recent content — but that fades quickly if the content is disappointing.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller simplifies to curb abuses, but the reality is more granular. Google has algorithms dedicated to freshness (Google Freshness, notably) that analyze much more than just the date: update rates, crawl volume, engagement, recent media coverage.
So yes, the visible date is not a factor — but the freshness perceived by the algorithm certainly is in certain contexts. [To be verified] if Google ever communicates the exact weighting of these signals, but for now, it remains opaque.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
For news queries, Google News, or Discover, the date plays a more central role — not as a pure ranking factor, but as an eligibility filter. Content without a recent date or poorly marked will simply not be considered for these surfaces.
Moreover, if your competitor consistently displays a fresh date and you do not, and your topic calls for freshness (tech, legal, finance), you risk losing CTR due to the contrast effect. It’s a second-order effect, but a real one. Google doesn’t penalize you, but the user skips over you — and that amounts to the same.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do with dates on your site?
Stop playing with dates as a direct SEO lever. If you substantially update content — adding sections, fresh data, updated examples — then yes, change the update date and make it clear to the user ('Updated on…').
If you're just correcting a typo or a dead link, leave the original date alone. The idea is for the date to reflect a genuine added value for the reader, not a gimmick. Configure your CMS so that it only modifies the date on manual changes or strict criteria (e.g., percentage of changed content).
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not mass republish your old articles just to show a recent date without improving the core content. Some still do this, thinking they can fool Google — it doesn’t work, and it can even degrade user experience if someone returns to a 'new' article and realizes it has nothing new.
Also avoid marking inconsistencies: if your Schema.org shows one date, your meta datePublished shows another, and the visible content mentions yet another, Google might ignore all your dates or choose one at random. Consistency and clarity — always.
How can you check that your date implementation is correct?
Use Google’s Rich Results Test to check that your Schema.org tags (datePublished, dateModified) are parsed correctly. Compare with what Google actually displays in the SERPs by doing a 'site:yourdomain.com' search.
If you manage a news site or a blog with a high publication frequency, regularly audit the consistency between CMS date, HTML date, Schema date, displayed date. A mismatch can confuse the user — and that’s lost CTR for no good reason.
- Configure your CMS to modify the date only during substantial content changes
- Use distinct and consistent Schema.org datePublished and dateModified tags
- Clearly display 'Updated on' if you refresh old content with real added value
- Audit your snippets in the SERPs to verify that Google extracts the correct date
- Never force a future or fictitious date — it can harm your credibility and violate Schema.org guidelines
- Document your editorial strategy: when and why you update dates, to maintain a consistent line over time
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Si je change juste la date sans toucher au contenu, est-ce que ça améliore mon positionnement ?
La date de mise à jour doit-elle toujours apparaître dans les SERP ?
Faut-il utiliser datePublished et dateModified dans le Schema.org ?
Mon CMS met à jour la date automatiquement à chaque edit, que faire ?
La date impacte-t-elle le CTR même si ce n'est pas un facteur de ranking ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 985h14 · published on 26/02/2021
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