Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 3:35 AMP booste-t-il vraiment votre classement dans Google ou est-ce un mythe ?
- 9:29 La vitesse de chargement est-elle vraiment un facteur de classement déterminant ?
- 10:26 Google interprète-t-il vraiment l'intention derrière chaque requête pour choisir le type de page à ranker ?
- 18:41 Les URLs en caractères non latins pénalisent-elles vraiment votre référencement ?
- 20:04 Faut-il vraiment utiliser une redirection 301 à chaque changement d'URL ?
- 25:21 Publier le même contenu sur plusieurs sites tue-t-il votre SEO ?
- 30:00 Le rel=canonical peut-il vraiment booster votre visibilité si votre contenu existe ailleurs ?
- 35:50 L'ordre des balises H1, H2, H3 a-t-il encore un impact sur votre SEO ?
- 39:31 Le contenu unique suffit-il vraiment à se démarquer dans les SERP ?
Google confirms that PageRank flows between the pages of the same site through internal links. This transfer of authority directly influences Google's ability to discover your content and assess its relative importance. In practical terms, your internal linking structure determines which pages Google prioritizes — and which ones remain invisible.
What you need to understand
What exactly is internal PageRank?
PageRank has never disappeared, contrary to what some believed when Google removed the green bar from its browser. The algorithm continues to operate behind the scenes, and Mueller confirms it: every page on your site has an internal authority score that is transmitted through your links.
When a page A (high authority) points to a page B (low authority), it transfers part of its juice. This mechanism works exactly like external backlinks, but on the scale of your own domain. The difference? You control 100% of this distribution.
Why does Google emphasize the “discovery” of content?
The term “discovery” is not trivial. Google crawls by following links — if a page is never linked from any other page, it technically remains invisible to Googlebot, even if it exists in your XML sitemap.
More importantly: a page buried 8 clicks deep receives so little crawl budget that it can take weeks to be indexed, even after publication. Thus, internal linking determines the speed and priority of crawling.
What does “importance of content” mean in this context?
Google uses the volume and quality of internal links pointing to a page as a signal of its relative importance within your site. If your homepage links to your pricing page 50 times and only once to your blog article, Google draws a logical conclusion.
This “importance” influences the potential ranking of the page. A page deemed secondary by your own architecture will struggle to rank, even if its content is excellent — you’ve effectively cut its legs out from under it.
- Internal PageRank flows through your links just like external backlinks transmit authority
- Click depth determines how quickly and frequently a page is crawled
- The number of internal links a page receives signals its strategic importance within your site to Google
- An orphan page (no incoming links) remains invisible even if it’s listed in the sitemap
- Link architecture is an SEO lever that you control 100%, unlike backlinks
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. Large-scale tests show that strengthening the internal linking of a category improves its ranking within 2-4 weeks, without changing the content. I’ve seen e-commerce sites gain 30% organic traffic just by reorganizing their navigation links.
The issue? Most CMSs generate a catastrophic default linking structure: all the site’s pages link to the footer (200 identical links), sidebars dilute juice to unnecessary pages, and strategic content receives only a single link from the blog archive.
What nuances need to be addressed?
Mueller does not say that all internal links carry the same weight. A link from your homepage in the main content is worth infinitely more than a link in the footer repeated on 10,000 pages. Google can distinguish between a contextual editorial link and a generic navigational link.
Another point: the number of outgoing links from a page dilutes the juice transmitted. If your homepage points to 200 pages, each receives 1/200th of its PageRank. [To be verified]: the exact dilution formula remains unclear — Google never discloses precise coefficients, but the principle is confirmed.
When does this rule not apply?
Nofollow internal links do not officially transmit PageRank since 2019-2020 (change in Google policy), although some tests suggest they still influence crawling. In practical terms: there’s no need to nofollow your internal links, except in very specific cases (login pages, cart).
Sites with massive duplicate content or generalized thin content see the effects of internal linking collapse. If 80% of your pages are empty or nearly identical, distributing PageRank among them changes nothing — you recycle emptiness. Linking amplifies existing quality; it does not create it.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do right now?
Start with an internal linking audit using Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Identify your strategic pages (those that generate revenue or qualified traffic) and count the number of internal links they receive. You’ll likely discover that your T&Cs page receives 500 links while your best landing page... receives 3.
Next, analyze the click depth: any important page should be accessible within a maximum of 3 clicks from the homepage. If your strategic articles are 6-7 clicks deep, they’re struggling — bring them to the surface through “recommended content” blocks or a navigation redesign.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not multiply identical footer links on all pages — it's the worst possible dilution. Google assigns little weight to a link repeated 10,000 times. Favor contextual links within the body of content, with varied and relevant anchors.
Avoid sealed silos where each category only links to its own subpages. While thematic siloing makes sense, some cross-links between complementary categories strengthen the entire site. Balance lies between a clear structure and logical connections.
How can you verify that your architecture is effective?
Track the indexing rate of your new pages: how many days before they appear on Google after publication? If it takes more than 7 days, your linking may be inadequate. The same goes for the crawl rate in Search Console — strategic pages crawled once a month indicate a structural issue.
Compare the number of internal links received by your top traffic pages versus your zero traffic pages. If the correlation is weak (well-linked pages that don’t rank), your problem lies elsewhere (content, technical). If it’s strong but reversed (performing pages poorly linked), you have significant room for improvement.
- Audit the number of internal links received by each strategic page (goal: minimum 10-15 contextual links)
- Reduce the click depth of all important pages to a maximum of 3 clicks from the homepage
- Remove or minimize repetitive footer/sidebar links that dilute PageRank
- Vary internal link anchors to prevent algorithmic over-optimization
- Create blocks of contextual links within the content (related articles, complementary products)
- Monitor the indexing delay of new pages to measure linking effectiveness
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le PageRank interne fonctionne-t-il vraiment comme le PageRank externe ?
Combien de liens internes une page stratégique doit-elle recevoir ?
Les liens en footer ou sidebar transmettent-ils du PageRank ?
Faut-il utiliser nofollow sur certains liens internes ?
Une page sans lien interne peut-elle quand même être indexée via le sitemap ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 27/12/2019
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.