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Official statement

HTTPS is considered a ranking factor described as a soft signal. While it can slightly impact ranking, it isn't a decisive factor, and well-established content on HTTP can still rank well.
27:56
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h01 💬 EN 📅 23/01/2019 ✂ 10 statements
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Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that HTTPS remains a 'soft signal' — it influences ranking, but only slightly. A well-structured HTTP site with strong content and quality backlinks can still outperform a poor HTTPS competitor. The real issue isn't the SEO boost, but user trust and long-term technical implications.

What you need to understand

What exactly is a 'soft signal'?

When Mueller refers to a soft signal, he describes a factor that enters the algorithm but never decisively on its own. Unlike major criteria such as content relevance or backlink quality, HTTPS does not create a radical shift.

In practical terms, two strictly equivalent pages—same content, same link profile, same UX—will see the HTTPS page gain a marginal advantage. However, as soon as a quality gap appears, this micro-boost disappears into the statistical noise. Google openly states that established content on HTTP will continue to rank well if everything else is in order.

Why did Google introduce this factor in the first place?

The introduction of HTTPS as a ranking signal aimed to accelerate the adoption of encryption on the web. Google wanted to push publishers towards a safer infrastructure rather than revolutionizing its algorithm.

The message was simple: migrate, and you’ll get a little boost. But the main effect lay elsewhere—in the browsers (Chrome shows 'Not Secure' on HTTP sites) and in user trust. The SEO signal was just one incentive among others, never the primary driver.

What are the practical implications for a high-performing HTTP site?

If your HTTP site generates solid organic traffic, migrating to HTTPS won't trigger a miracle. You won't jump from page 3 to page 1 just by adding an SSL certificate. The impact measures in tenths of a position, not in spectacular leaps.

On the other hand, staying on HTTP comes with real risks: browser warnings, loss of referrer data (HTTPS sites do not pass their referrer to HTTP sites), and increasing difficulty in using certain modern APIs. The real danger isn't SEO; it’s technical and UX-related.

  • HTTPS is a weak signal — it never compensates for poor content or a weak link profile.
  • A well-established HTTP site will continue to rank if the SEO fundamentals are strong.
  • The real risks of HTTP are UX, security, and technical compatibility, not direct ranking.
  • The migration to HTTPS should be done for the right reasons, not for a fantasy of instant SEO boost.
  • Google uses this signal as a lever for incentive, not as a primary sorting criterion.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Absolutely. HTTPS migrations tracked over the years show nearly zero traffic variations when the migration is clean—well-configured 301 redirects, valid certificates, no mixed content. Sites that see a gain often owe it to fixing pre-existing issues, not to HTTPS itself.

Let’s be honest: in SEO audits, HTTPS never appears as a blocking factor for pages that are stagnating. The problem is always elsewhere — poorly targeted search intents, toxic backlinks, cannibalization, sloppy structure. HTTPS is a checkbox, not a strategy.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller is correct, but he omits one point: HTTPS indirectly influences other signals. HTTP sites lose precise analytics data (referrer masked), complicating optimization. They also experience a higher bounce rate on Chrome due to the 'Not Secure' warning, which can degrade behavioral metrics.

Another nuance: certain sectors—finance, health, e-commerce—are scrutinized differently. An HTTP transactional site will be indirectly penalized by user distrust, even if the algorithm doesn’t penalize it outright. The soft signal thus becomes a real contextual disadvantage. [To be verified] in specific regulated verticals.

In which cases does this rule not apply?

The rule holds for established sites with a solid SEO history. But for a new domain, staying on HTTP is strategically suicidal—not for ranking, but because Chrome and Firefox display aggressive warnings that kill conversion.

Another exception: sites that rely on partnerships or third-party APIs. Many platforms (Google Ads, Facebook Pixel, some CDNs) perform poorly or outright refuse to serve content on HTTP pages. HTTPS then becomes a technical constraint, not an SEO choice.

Warning: A botched HTTPS migration (invalid certificate, chain redirects, mixed content) can lead to a severe traffic drop. The soft signal never compensates for a failed technical execution.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do if your site is still on HTTP?

Migrate, but not for hypothetical SEO gains. Do it to secure your users, avoid browser warnings, and ensure compatibility with modern web standards. HTTPS has become the technical baseline, not a competitive advantage.

Plan the migration methodically: purchase a valid SSL/TLS certificate (or use Let's Encrypt for free), configure 301 permanent redirects for all HTTP URLs to HTTPS, and check that no mixed content (images, scripts, CSS in HTTP) remains. A post-migration audit via Screaming Frog or Google Search Console is essential.

What mistakes should you avoid during the HTTPS migration?

The classic mistake: migrating without updating the XML sitemap and canonical tags. As a result, Google continues to crawl the old HTTP URLs, diluting the crawl budget and causing temporary duplicates.

Another common pitfall: forgetting to configure the HSTS redirect (HTTP Strict Transport Security) that forces browsers to always load the HTTPS version. Without HSTS, some internal or external links will continue to point to HTTP, creating unnecessary redirects that slow down the site and dilute PageRank. Finally, never neglect to test the valid certificate — an expired or misconfigured certificate triggers terrifying warnings for the user.

How do you check that everything works after migration?

First, check the Search Console: add the HTTPS property if it isn't done yet, and monitor crawl errors for 2-3 weeks. Ensure that historical backlinks are properly redirected and do not generate redirect chains.

Use tools like SSL Labs to audit the certificate configuration and detect security flaws. Manually test several sensitive URLs (homepage, categories, product sheets) to confirm that no mixed content is blocking the HTTPS padlock. Lastly, monitor your Core Web Vitals — a poorly optimized migration may introduce loading delays if external resources (CDN, APIs) are not also migrated.

  • Install a valid SSL/TLS certificate and configure permanent 301 redirects.
  • Update the XML sitemap, canonical tags, and internal links to point to HTTPS.
  • Enable HSTS to force browsers to systematically load the secure version.
  • Check for mixed content (images, scripts, CSS in HTTP) that breaks the padlock.
  • Audit the SSL configuration via SSL Labs and monitor the Search Console for 3 weeks.
  • Test the Core Web Vitals post-migration to detect any introduced slowdowns.
HTTPS won't dramatically boost your positions, but it has become a non-negotiable technical prerequisite. The migration must be clean, exhaustive, and carefully monitored. If your site is complex—multi-domains, subdomains, legacy infrastructure—these optimizations can quickly become a headache. Enlisting a specialized SEO agency to orchestrate the migration and avoid technical pitfalls can save you valuable time and secure your organic traffic.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site HTTP peut-il encore bien ranker sur Google ?
Oui, si le contenu est solide et le profil de liens fort. Le HTTPS est un signal faible qui ne compense jamais des fondamentaux SEO médiocres.
La migration HTTPS améliore-t-elle systématiquement le trafic organique ?
Non. Une migration bien exécutée est généralement neutre en termes de trafic. Les gains observés proviennent souvent de corrections techniques collatérales, pas du HTTPS lui-même.
Quels sont les vrais risques de rester en HTTP ?
Avertissements navigateur qui dégradent la conversion, perte de données de référents HTTPS, incompatibilité avec certaines APIs modernes, et perception négative des utilisateurs.
Le HTTPS influence-t-il les Core Web Vitals ?
Indirectement. Une migration mal faite peut introduire des redirections superflues ou du contenu mixte qui ralentit le chargement. Mais le protocole HTTPS en soi n'impacte pas les métriques de performance.
Faut-il migrer en HTTPS même pour un site purement informationnel sans transaction ?
Oui, pour éviter les warnings navigateur, garantir la compatibilité technique future, et maintenir la confiance utilisateur. Le HTTPS est devenu la norme, quel que soit le secteur.
🏷 Related Topics
Content HTTPS & Security Pagination & Structure

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