What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

Reassessing and potentially deleting pages that generate no traffic could help maintain the overall quality of the site.
57:22
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 59:08 💬 EN 📅 07/04/2015 ✂ 11 statements
Watch on YouTube (57:22) →
Other statements from this video 10
  1. 3:31 Le .com est-il vraiment plus performant que les ccTLD pour cibler à l'international ?
  2. 5:25 Pourquoi la mise à jour mobile-friendly a-t-elle bouleversé les stratégies SEO mobile ?
  3. 9:56 Comment accélérer la réindexation après une correction mobile : le sitemap suffit-il vraiment ?
  4. 11:37 L'algorithme mobile-friendly pénalise-t-il page par page ou site entier ?
  5. 14:52 Le contenu caché sur mobile compte-t-il vraiment pour le SEO en indexation mobile-first ?
  6. 17:38 Les sous-domaines UGC sont-ils un piège pour votre référencement ?
  7. 21:33 Les templates communs sur plusieurs sites sont-ils vraiment sans risque pour le SEO ?
  8. 27:32 Comment Google traite-t-il réellement vos fichiers de désaveu de liens ?
  9. 40:11 L'algorithme mobile-friendly fonctionne-t-il vraiment en temps réel sur votre site ?
  10. 67:10 Pourquoi Google renvoie-t-il systématiquement à la pertinence quand le classement chute ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google suggests that removing pages that generate no traffic may improve the overall quality of a site. This statement encourages websites to tidy up their structures. However, be cautious: not all traffic-less pages are useless, and this approach requires careful analysis before any mass deletion actions.

What you need to understand

Why is Google concerned about traffic-less pages?

Google has to explore and index billions of pages every day. When a site accumulates low-value pages, it dilutes the quality signals sent to the algorithms. The search engine then dedicates crawl budget to URLs that provide no value to either users or the site itself.

This statement aligns with the logic of the Helpful Content Updates. Google aims to favor sites that focus their efforts on useful content rather than those that multiply pages to artificially inflate their volume. A site with 10,000 pages, of which 7,000 serve no purpose, sends a signal of low editorial quality.

What exactly is a traffic-less page?

A traffic-less page is a URL that generates no organic visits over a given period. The question is: what period? Google remains deliberately vague. Some mention 90 days, while others consider 12 months. This ambiguity poses challenges for SEO practitioners.

It's essential to distinguish between several types of traffic-less pages. Some are indeed useless: outdated product sheets, duplicate content, automatically generated pages with no value. Others are strategic despite the absence of visits: deep conversion pages in a funnel, expert content for a niche audience, internal linking pages that provide structure.

How does this recommendation fit into Google's overall strategy?

For several years, Google has been advocating quality over quantity. Recent algorithm updates systematically target sites that prioritize volume over relevance. Mueller's statement aligns with this direction.

The deletion of unnecessary pages theoretically improves several internal metrics. The effective crawl rate increases, the average depth of important pages decreases, and the useful content/total content ratio improves. All of this sends positive signals to ranking algorithms.

  • Overall quality: A streamlined site better communicates its theme and expertise to algorithms.
  • Crawl budget: Fewer useless pages mean more resources dedicated to strategic content.
  • User experience: A clear structure facilitates navigation and reduces bounce rates.
  • Relevance signals: Focusing internal linking on high-performing pages strengthens their authority.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation applicable without nuance?

No, and this is where Mueller's statement shows its limits. Not all traffic-less pages are created equal. A legal notice page might generate zero organic traffic but is still mandatory. A niche product page may have 5 visits a year while generating significant revenue.

The real issue lies in the expression "pages that generate no traffic." Google does not specify: no organic traffic? No total traffic? Over what period? With what measurement methodology? This ambiguity makes the recommendation challenging to apply without risk. [To be verified]: what quantitative threshold does Google really consider problematic?

What risks do we incur by deleting too quickly?

Massively deleting pages can create SEO disasters. Pages without organic traffic may still receive visits via other channels: direct links, email marketing, social media. They can also serve as internal linking bridges to strategic pages.

E-commerce sites are particularly vulnerable. A product sheet with no sales might seem useless, but it may contribute to the semantic long tail of a high-performing category. Some B2B sectors have long sales cycles: a page may remain dormant for 18 months before converting a prospect who discovered it during early-stage research.

In what cases does this rule truly apply?

The deletion of traffic-less pages is relevant for really obsolete content. Outdated blog articles on surpassing topics, product sheets of discontinued references with no historical interest, automatically generated pages without editorial oversight. These URLs pollute the index without providing value.

News sites or blogs that produce a high volume of content are natural candidates for this cleanup. A media outlet publishing 50 articles per week for 10 years will accumulate 26,000 URLs. If 60% have not generated any traffic for 24 months, their consolidation or deletion can indeed improve overall performance. However, this decision requires granular analysis, not a brutal deletion.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you identify truly useless pages without making mistakes?

The first step is to export your Analytics and Search Console data. Filter the URLs with zero organic visits for a minimum of 12 months. Cross-reference this list with total traffic data: some SEO-free pages may perform via other channels.

Next, segment by type. Technical pages (legal mentions, terms and conditions, HTML sitemap) remain mandatory. Transactional pages should be evaluated by their conversion rate, not their gross traffic. Information pages with no interactions for 18 months are serious candidates for deletion or redesign.

What alternatives to outright deletion exist?

Deletion isn't the only option. Content consolidation allows you to merge 5 weak articles on the same topic into one comprehensive and effective guide. This approach preserves the URL history via 301 redirects while enhancing overall quality.

Switching to noindex is an intermediate solution for pages you want to keep accessible without presenting them to Google's index. This works for archived content, internal pages of a conversion process, or resources intended only for logged-in users. Canonicalization to a primary version is also an option for managing similar content.

How can you measure the impact of these deletions?

Before any action, establish baseline indicators: number of indexed pages, overall organic traffic, average crawl rate, average positions on your strategic queries. Document precisely the deleted, redirected, or consolidated URLs.

After implementation, monitor for at least 90 days. The organic traffic should stabilize or increase on your important pages. The Search Console coverage report should show a reduction in errors and an improvement in the explored/indexed pages ratio. If you notice a sudden drop, you probably deleted pages that indirectly generated value.

  • Export Analytics and Search Console to identify pages without traffic for 12+ months.
  • Segment by type: editorial content, product sheets, technical pages, generated content.
  • Evaluate alternatives: consolidation, 301 redirects, noindex, canonicalization.
  • Document each deletion decision with justification and date.
  • Monitor changes in traffic, indexing, and crawl budget for at least 90 days.
  • Prepare a rollback plan in case of unforeseen negative impact.
Cleaning up a site cluttered with value-less pages can significantly improve its SEO performance, provided it is done methodically. This process requires a detailed technical analysis, cross-referencing multiple data sources, and ongoing monitoring post-implementation. The risks of error are high: deleting pages that contribute indirectly to linking or conversion can degrade your results instead of improving them. If your site has several thousand URLs and you lack the internal resources for a thorough audit, consulting a specialized SEO agency may be wise. An external perspective and proven processes significantly reduce the risks of an operation that, if poorly executed, can jeopardize years of SEO work.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps sans trafic avant de considérer une page comme inutile ?
Google ne donne aucun chiffre précis. En pratique, 12 mois sans aucune visite organique constitue un seuil raisonnable pour commencer l'analyse, mais ce critère doit être croisé avec d'autres métriques comme le taux de conversion et le trafic total.
Faut-il rediriger en 301 toutes les pages supprimées ?
Pas systématiquement. Redirigez uniquement vers une page thématiquement proche si elle existe. Pour des contenus vraiment obsolètes sans équivalent, une erreur 404 ou 410 est préférable à une redirection artificielle vers la homepage.
Cette recommandation vaut-elle pour tous les types de sites ?
Non. Les sites e-commerce avec des milliers de références, les médias d'actualité, les forums ou les sites B2B à cycle long doivent adapter cette règle. Une page sans trafic immédiat peut avoir une valeur stratégique différée.
Le noindex est-il une bonne alternative à la suppression ?
Oui, pour les pages que vous souhaitez garder accessibles aux utilisateurs mais retirer de l'index. Attention toutefois : une multiplication de pages en noindex peut aussi poser des questions sur la qualité globale de votre architecture.
Comment éviter de supprimer des pages qui génèrent des conversions indirectes ?
Analysez le parcours utilisateur complet dans Analytics. Une page peut avoir peu de trafic d'entrée mais jouer un rôle clé dans un tunnel de conversion multi-étapes. Croisez les données de trafic avec celles des objectifs et des événements.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 10

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 07/04/2015

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.