Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 1:37 La balise canonical peut-elle vraiment bloquer les pages portes ?
- 3:09 Les URL dupliquées pénalisent-elles vraiment le crawl budget des gros sites ?
- 5:06 Comment les liens internes influencent-ils réellement le crawl et le ranking de vos pages ?
- 6:06 Les attributs alt et title influencent-ils vraiment le référencement des pages liées ?
- 7:18 Combien de liens dans le footer est-ce vraiment trop pour Google ?
- 14:46 Faut-il vraiment éviter de multiplier les liens dans les pieds de page ?
- 29:12 Comment gérer le contenu dupliqué entre deux sites sans pénaliser son indexation ?
- 30:09 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment le contenu dupliqué dans son index ?
- 34:14 Le balisage organisationnel suffit-il vraiment à garantir un Knowledge Panel ?
- 40:55 Les interstitiels mobiles tuent-ils vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
- 64:46 Comment créer du contenu « significativement meilleur » que vos concurrents selon Google ?
- 65:57 Le balisage de données structurées peut-il tuer vos rich snippets sans impacter votre classement ?
According to John Mueller, removing URL suffixes like .html offers no direct SEO benefits. Worse, this action triggers a complete reindexing that can temporarily weaken your rankings. The only exception is during major overhauls where the URL architecture is strategically redesigned.
What you need to understand
Why is there such an obsession with removing URL extensions?
Many SEOs believe that "clean" URLs without technical extensions (.html, .php, .aspx) are favored by Google. This myth originates from a time when URL rewriting symbolized technical modernization and dynamic URLs with parameters posed crawling issues.
The reality is that Google has been effectively crawling and indexing all URL formats for years. The technical extension has never been a ranking criterion. What truly matters is the relevance of the content, the authority of the page, and the user experience.
What happens technically when you remove an extension?
When you remove .html from your URLs, you effectively create a new URL architecture. Each old URL must 301 redirect to its new version. For Google, this is a signal of change that triggers a complete reevaluation process.
Crawlers need to rediscover all your pages, recalculate the internal PageRank using the new URLs, and consolidate ranking signals. This transition consumes crawl budget and can induce temporary fluctuations in the SERPs, especially if there is a high volume of redirects.
In what context does this change become relevant?
Mueller mentions one exception: the major site overhaul. In practical terms, if you are redesigning your site structure, migrating to a new CMS, or completely restructuring your taxonomy, then yes, modifying URLs makes sense.
In this case, you take advantage of an inevitable change to optimize the overall structure: shortening paths, integrating relevant keywords into slugs, and harmonizing nomenclature. Removing the extension becomes a detail in a larger project that justifies the technical investment.
- URL extensions (.html, .php) have no direct impact on Google ranking
- Removing these extensions causes a complete reindexing with risks of temporary fluctuations
- The only legitimate case is a global redesign where the URL architecture is rethought for strategic reasons
- The technical cost (301 redirects, management of internal links, updating sitemaps) far exceeds the nonexistent SEO gain
- Always prioritize URL stability unless there is a major business or technical necessity
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. Audits conducted on thousands of sites confirm that there is no correlation between URL format and SEO performance. Sites with .html in top positions coexist with "clean" URLs on the same competitive queries.
What’s the issue? Many agencies still promote unnecessary URL migrations citing this argument. The result: clients experiencing temporary traffic loss for no gain whatsoever. URL stability is an underestimated asset.
What are the real risks of a technical URL migration?
Beyond reindexing, the main danger comes from implementation errors. A poorly configured 301 redirect (redirect chains, faulty Regex rules, omissions of certain pages) can fragment PageRank or create cascading 404s.
External backlinks point to the old URLs. Even with perfect 301s, there is an estimated loss of 10-15% of SEO juice during a redirect transition. Multiply that by hundreds or thousands of pages, and the cumulative impact is measurable. [To be verified]: Google claims that 301s no longer lose PageRank, but A/B tests still show discrepancies.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
If your CMS generates URLs with long, unreadable dynamic parameters (?page_id=12345&cat=78), then yes, a clean URL rewriting improves user experience and facilitates crawling. But that’s an architectural issue, not an extension issue.
Another exception: migrating to a modern framework (JAMstack, headless CMS) often requires rethinking URLs. In this context, it’s better to optimize from the start rather than keeping obsolete extensions by principle.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if your URLs have extensions?
Nothing. Really. If your site is performing well, don’t change a thing. Instead, invest your time and budget in quality content, optimizing loading speed, or link-building.
If you are undergoing a redesign for business reasons (CMS change, internationalization, catalog restructuring), then yes, seize the opportunity to harmonize your URL structure. But do this as part of a comprehensive project, never in isolation.
What mistakes should be avoided during a URL migration?
The fatal error: implementing 301 redirects without thoroughly mapping all old URLs. Use your server logs and Google Search Console to identify every indexed URL, including variants with UTM parameters or sessions.
Second trap: forgetting to update internal links in your HTML code. Even with 301s, routing all your internal links through a redirect dilutes PageRank and slows down crawling. Update your templates, menus, XML sitemaps, and static files.
How can you check that the migration hasn’t degraded your performance?
Keep a close watch on three metrics in the 15 days post-migration: crawl rate (Search Console > Crawl Stats), changes in the number of indexed pages, and organic positions on your strategic queries.
Set alerts for HTTP response codes: no 404s should appear on previously indexed URLs. Ensure that your 301s are not creating chains (A → B → C), and that the server response time remains stable despite the increased redirects.
- Keep your current URLs unless there’s a major technical or business redesign
- If migration is necessary: map 100% of indexed URLs before switching
- Implement direct 301s (no chains) and test each redirect rule
- Update all internal links hardcoded in the HTML and templates
- Submit the new XML sitemap and monitor indexing for 30 days
- Monitor organic traffic by page segment to detect anomalies
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que Google pénalise les sites avec des URLs en .html ou .php ?
Les URLs sans extension se chargent-elles plus vite ?
Combien de temps prend Google pour réindexer un site après une migration d'URL ?
Les redirections 301 conservent-elles 100% du PageRank ?
Faut-il supprimer les anciennes URLs du sitemap après avoir mis en place des 301 ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h20 · published on 25/08/2017
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