Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 4:15 Soumettre tous ses URL au sitemap améliore-t-il vraiment le crawling par Google ?
- 11:05 Faut-il vraiment éviter de mettre à jour les dates de publication sans modifier le contenu ?
- 25:56 Votre robots.txt bloque-t-il l'indexation de vos pages stratégiques sans que vous le sachiez ?
- 51:20 Comment les erreurs de crawl dans Search Console révèlent-elles les failles cachées de votre indexation ?
- 53:20 Les pages AMP remplacent-elles vraiment les versions mobiles standard pour le SEO ?
- 61:20 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour son contenu régulièrement pour ranker ?
- 70:20 Pourquoi un blocage réseau ou DNS peut-il torpiller votre indexation Google ?
- 97:40 Les domaines avec mots-clés boostent-ils vraiment le ranking ?
- 115:20 Les headers HTTP influencent-ils vraiment la fréquence de crawl de vos ressources ?
Google claims that the number of clicks from the homepage does not directly impact ranking. What matters is the relevance of the content to the user's query. However, completely ignoring your site's architecture would be a strategic mistake: depth indirectly affects crawling, internal PageRank, and the perceived authority of your pages.
What you need to understand
What does this statement from Google really mean?
Google clarifies that content depth—the distance from the site's root—is not a direct ranking factor. A page accessible in 5 clicks from the homepage could theoretically outrank a page accessible in 2 clicks, if it is more relevant to the query.
This clarification addresses a persistent misconception in the SEO community: that any important page should be placed no more than 3 clicks from the homepage. Google dismantles this myth by reminding us that quality and relevance take precedence over structural position.
Why has this confusion persisted for years?
The confusion arises because depth influences indirectly several critical mechanisms for SEO. The crawl budget, for instance: Googlebot prioritizes crawling pages that are close to the root and those that receive internal links.
Similarly, internal PageRank dilutes as one moves away from the homepage. A page buried 6 clicks deep receives less authority through internal linking than a page 2 clicks deep, all else being equal. But it is not the depth itself that penalizes: it is the lack of internal links.
So what are the real variables that matter?
Google emphasizes: what determines ranking is the relevance of the content to the search intent, its intrinsic quality, and authority signals (backlinks, internal links, user engagement). Depth is merely a structural proxy.
This means a deep category page within a well-linked hierarchy can rank perfectly well if it receives strategic internal links and adequately addresses a query. Architecture should serve crawling and UX, not an arbitrary distance rule.
- Depth is not a direct ranking factor according to Google
- What counts: relevance, quality, internal links, backlinks
- Depth influences crawl budget and internal PageRank flow
- A well-linked page 5 clicks deep can outperform an orphan page 2 clicks deep
- Architecture should optimize crawling and user experience, not adhere to arbitrary distance
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Yes and no. On well-structured sites with a solid internal linking strategy, we do indeed observe that deep pages can rank with ease. However, on poorly structured sites, the correlation between depth and lack of ranking is glaring.
The problem is that Google does not tell the whole truth: depth does not directly affect ranking, but it influences everything that conditions ranking. A page 6 clicks deep without internal links will not be crawled regularly, will not receive internal PageRank, and will never be considered important by the algorithm. [To verify] to what extent Google truly differentiates structural depth from page authority.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
The first nuance concerns crawl budget. On a site with thousands of pages, Googlebot does not crawl everything at the same frequency. Pages close to the root and those that are regularly updated are prioritized. A deep page updated daily will be crawled less often than a nearby page updated monthly.
The second nuance touches on user behavior. A page buried 5 clicks deep statistically receives less internal traffic, less time spent, and fewer engagement signals. Google denies that depth is a factor, but it does not deny that these indirect signals influence ranking.
In what cases does this rule not apply as expected?
On e-commerce sites with a complex hierarchy, we observe that deep product pages (category > subcategory > sub-subcategory > product) rank poorly if they do not receive direct links from the homepage or hub pages. Depth then becomes a structural handicap.
Similarly, on news or editorial content sites, articles published in deep sections (/blog/2023/march/article) are crawled less frequently than those at the root (/article). Google does not crawl everything: it prioritizes. And this prioritization mechanically favors pages closer to the root.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do to optimize your architecture?
Focus on strategic internal linking rather than adhering to an arbitrary distance rule. An important page should receive links from pages with high authority (homepage, hub pages, popular articles), regardless of its structural depth.
Audit your site with Screaming Frog or OnCrawl to identify pages with high depth AND low linking. These are the pages that genuinely suffer. A page 5 clicks deep with 20 incoming internal links will perform better than an orphan page 2 clicks deep.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not sacrifice a logical hierarchy to comply with a 3-click rule. If your e-commerce site requires 4 levels of categories to remain coherent, keep that structure. Compensate with targeted internal linking.
Do not presume that a deep page will never rank. Google crawls and indexes pages 7-8 clicks deep on well-optimized sites. What matters is that they are accessible via internal links and receive PageRank.
How can you check if your site is correctly structured?
Use Google Search Console to identify pages that are discovered but not crawled. These are often deep pages with poor linking. Correct this by adding internal links from pages that are crawled regularly.
Analyze your crawl rate by depth in OnCrawl or Botify. If pages 4+ clicks deep are crawled less than once a month, that’s a red flag. Strengthen linking or move them up in the hierarchy.
- Audit the depth AND number of incoming internal links per page
- Strengthen the internal linking of deep strategic pages
- Monitor the crawl rate by depth level in GSC
- Do not artificially flatten the hierarchy if it harms user logic
- Create hub pages to redistribute PageRank to deep pages
- Use the XML sitemap to signal buried important pages
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une page à 5 clics peut-elle vraiment ranker aussi bien qu'une page à 2 clics ?
Faut-il encore respecter la règle des 3 clics maximum ?
Comment Google priorise-t-il le crawl si la profondeur n'est pas un critère ?
Les pages enfouies dans un blog sont-elles désavantagées ?
Le sitemap XML peut-il compenser une profondeur excessive ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h06 · published on 17/01/2017
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