Official statement
Other statements from this video 10 ▾
- 1:06 Pourquoi Google ne garantit-il jamais le maintien des rankings lors d'une migration de site ?
- 2:40 Comment accéder aux données de mots-clés dans la nouvelle Search Console ?
- 18:36 Faut-il abandonner rel=prev/next au profit de la balise canonical pour la pagination ?
- 18:36 Faut-il vraiment abandonner rel=prev/next et simplifier vos URL canoniques ?
- 25:19 Les signaux externes comptent-ils encore pour le référencement local ?
- 25:52 Faut-il bloquer Googlebot-Image pour protéger son SEO textuel ?
- 32:17 Google ignore-t-il vraiment tous les liens dans les contenus UGC et automatisés ?
- 35:57 Les liens toxiques pénalisent-ils vraiment votre SEO ou Google les ignore-t-il simplement ?
- 45:20 Faut-il vraiment supprimer vos variantes d'URL pour améliorer votre SEO ?
- 47:38 Faut-il vraiment aligner données structurées et contenu visible pour éviter les pénalités ?
Google favors local results when they align with search intent but switches to international content if local offerings are inadequate or inappropriate. For SEO, this means that mediocre local content will never be protected by its geolocation against a relevant international competitor. The challenge is not just to bet on geographic proximity, but to combine thematic relevance and locality signals to maximize visibility.
What you need to understand
Does Google systematically apply a geographical filter to results?
No. Local relevance is just one criterion among others in the ranking algorithm. Google activates it when it detects a geolocalized intent: an explicit query ("restaurant marseille"), a mobile search with active geolocation, or a search history anchored in a specific territory.
However, as soon as the engine deems that the available local content does not adequately meet the user's intent, it broadens the scope and elevates national or international results. Concretely, if you search for "law firm specialized in intellectual property" in a medium-sized city, you will likely see Parisian or Lyonnais firms dominating the local SERPs—simply because local expertise does not exist or is not documented online.
How does Google determine that local content is "relevant"?
Local relevance is based on three pillars: consistent NAP (Name, Address, Phone) signals, local reviews and citations, and above all, semantic matching between the query and the page content. A business with a perfectly optimized Google Business Profile but a website lacking relevant content will not outrank a national competitor with strong thematic authority.
This is where many small businesses stumble: they rely entirely on proximity signals (address, hours, map) and neglect thematic depth. As a result, Google deems their content insufficient and displays international players that better meet the intent, even if they are 500 km away.
When does Google switch to international results?
Three main scenarios trigger this switch. First case: absence of indexed local content that is relevant to the query. Second case: informational or transactional search intent that transcends geography (e.g., "best CRM for small businesses" does not necessarily require a local answer). Third case: insufficient quality of local content compared to better-optimized international pages with higher domain authority.
In practice, we observe that specialized long-tail queries often escape the local filter, even on mobile with GPS activated. Google then prioritizes pure semantic relevance. This is why a local accountant might lose traffic to a well-documented national blog on a specific tax niche.
- Geographic proximity never compensates for poor content or misalignment with search intent.
- NAP and GBP signals are necessary but not sufficient: thematic depth remains crucial.
- Google automatically broadens the geographical scope if the local offering does not satisfy the detected intent.
- Informational queries and specialized long-tails more easily escape the local filter.
- Domain authority and content completeness can take precedence over geolocation, even on mobile.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. In principle, Mueller accurately describes the observable behavior of the algorithm: Google indeed mixes local and international results based on detected intent. However, the statement remains intentionally vague on the thresholds for switching and the relative weights between proximity signals and thematic relevance. [To be verified]: we do not know exactly at what level of "non-correspondence" Google decides to widen the geographic zone.
In practice, we find that certain verticals (health, law, finance) see their local SERPs dominated by national players even when local professionals exist. This suggests that Google places a very high value on thematic authority and E-E-A-T quality in these sectors, even at the cost of proximity. Conversely, for personal services (plumbing, hairdressing), the local filter remains very strict. The vertical matters as much as the query.
What nuances need to be added to this claim?
First point: search intent is not binary (local/international). Google detects nuances: a query can be "preferentially local" without being strictly geolocated. For example: "yoga classes" without a city mention will initially show local results if you are geolocated, but will quickly switch to national content (blogs, YouTube) if you scroll.
Second point: the notion of "available local content" is misleading. Available does not mean indexed. Many local businesses physically exist but are invisible to Google: no website, no updated GBP, no citations. In this case, Google simply has nothing to display—and the user sees international results by default. It's not that local content "does not match intent", it's that it does not exist digitally.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
Three major exceptions. First exception: queries with explicit geographical mention ("lawyer Lyon 3") impose a strict local filter, even if the content is poor. Google will display the available results, however poor they may be, because the geographical intent is non-negotiable.
Second exception: Google Business Profile in the Local Pack. Even with a non-existent or poorly designed website, a well-optimized GBP with many recent reviews can appear in the Local Pack, regardless of the quality of organic content. The Local Pack follows distinct criteria from traditional organic results—and that's where it gets strategically interesting.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely to maximize local visibility?
First action: build dense thematic content on your website, even if you are a local player. A plumber in Nantes who publishes detailed guides on plumbing issues specific to old Nantes buildings combines local relevance and thematic depth. Google understands both the geographical anchoring AND the informational value.
Second action: multiply consistent NAP signals across quality local directories (Yellow Pages, local Yelp, regional sector directories). These citations reinforce the geographical legitimacy of your digital presence. But be careful: inconsistent NAP (different address between the site and Google listing) dilutes the signal instead of reinforcing it.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Mistake #1: thinking that a Google Business Profile is enough. Many small businesses neglect their website because "in any case, customers come from Google Maps." Except that if a national competitor arrives with relevant and complete content, they will scoop up the organic clicks—and potentially part of the conversions, even without a local physical presence.
Mistake #2: neglecting the search intent behind local queries. "Lawyer Marseille" and "lawyer specialized in business law Marseille" do not trigger the same SERPs. The latter is more specialized, hence more likely to show national results if local expertise is not documented online. Adapting content to these nuances of intent is crucial.
How can you verify that your local strategy is effective?
First check: analyze geolocated queries that actually generate traffic via Google Search Console. Filter by queries containing your city/region, and see if you appear on queries without explicit geographical mention as well. If not, it means Google does not consider you relevant enough to broaden your visibility beyond the strict local filter.
Second check: test your target queries in private browsing with geolocation activated/deactivated. Compare the SERPs. If you completely disappear without geolocation, your visibility is fragile—you depend 100% on the local filter, which limits your reach. The goal is to be visible in both configurations, combining proximity signals and thematic authority.
- Optimize both the website (dense thematic content) and the Google Business Profile (reviews, photos, updated NAP).
- Create localized pages with real editorial content, not just a city-by-city iteration of the same template page.
- Obtain backlinks from local media, regional sector directories, and local partners to strengthen geographical anchoring.
- Regularly monitor positions on queries with and without geographical mention to evaluate your actual reach.
- Regularly compare your SERPs with those of national competitors to detect algorithm shifts.
- Analyze Google reviews (quantity, freshness, responses): this is an increasingly weighted signal in local ranking.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un contenu local de faible qualité peut-il quand même se classer grâce à la proximité ?
Google Business Profile suffit-il pour être visible localement ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il l'intention locale d'une requête ?
Les backlinks locaux renforcent-ils vraiment le SEO local ?
Peut-on être visible localement sans adresse physique ?
🎥 From the same video 10
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 19/03/2019
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