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Official statement

For now, we mainly distinguish between very slow sites and those with normal speed. The indirect effects on user behavior that impact conversion are more significant than the direct effect on ranking.
11:20
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h05 💬 EN 📅 20/10/2017 ✂ 29 statements
Watch on YouTube (11:20) →
Other statements from this video 28
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  3. 2:19 Cache vs. Similar on Google: How does this distinction impact your SEO strategy?
  4. 2:19 Are you making the most of Google’s cached versions and similar pages?
  5. 4:55 Why does it take months for content improvements to affect ranking?
  6. 4:58 How long does it really take for Google to reassess the quality of content?
  7. 6:24 Does brand popularity really affect Google ranking?
  8. 6:25 Does brand popularity really influence Google rankings?
  9. 9:44 Should you delete or noindex duplicate content flagged by Panda?
  10. 10:46 Does precise anchor text really boost your SEO more than a generic anchor?
  11. 13:20 Is loading speed truly a decisive SEO ranking factor?
  12. 15:02 Is it true that Google indexes tabbed content in a mobile-first world?
  13. 15:28 Is hidden content in tabs truly indexed in mobile-first?
  14. 17:35 How does Google really index identical products across multiple URLs?
  15. 19:33 Do you really need to contact webmasters before disavowing toxic backlinks?
  16. 20:32 Should you really use the disavow tool to handle toxic backlinks?
  17. 24:17 How does Google really rank a brand's social media pages in its search results?
  18. 26:56 Does mobile indexing really work with separate m-dot and dynamic sites?
  19. 27:41 Does mobile-first indexing really treat all types of mobile sites the same way?
  20. 29:02 How does Google actually adjust your rankings in real time?
  21. 29:09 Do Google's algorithms really work in real-time?
  22. 30:18 Why does the Search Console only show a fraction of your actual backlinks?
  23. 38:51 Can bad backlinks really harm your website?
  24. 39:53 Are PBNs truly detectable by Google or just a risky gamble?
  25. 48:31 Should you really ignore page numbers in your URLs for pagination?
  26. 50:34 Should you really prioritize NO-NO over NO-NB for Norwegian hreflang?
  27. 52:37 Should you still worry about URL escaping for Google’s JavaScript crawl?
  28. 57:17 Is it true that Google indexes all website JavaScript?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google primarily differentiates between very slow sites and normal speed sites, without fine-tuning the rankings based on microseconds gained. The direct effect on positions remains marginal compared to the indirect consequences: bounce rate, engagement, conversions. For an SEO practitioner, optimizing speed becomes mainly a UX and business lever, not an algorithmic obsession.

What you need to understand

Does Google really optimize rankings based on loading speed?

The answer is more nuanced than one might think. Google does not rank sites on a continuous speed scale. The algorithm primarily identifies two categories: very slow sites and others.

Specifically, if your site loads in 1.5 seconds versus 0.8 seconds, the direct impact on your organic positioning will be nearly negligible. However, a site that takes 6 seconds to display useful content will incur a penalty. This binary logic significantly simplifies the ground reality.

Why does Google mention more significant indirect effects?

Because speed mainly affects user behavior. A slow site generates frustration, rapid bouncing, cart abandonment. These behavioral signals influence your ranking much more than raw speed.

Google measures engagement metrics: time on page, pages per session, return rate to SERPs. If your site is slow, these indicators drop. The algorithm picks up on that. Speed becomes an indirect yet powerful factor.

What is the difference between perceived speed and technical speed?

A site can load quickly technically but appear slow to the user if the useful content takes time to display. Google now measures perception-oriented metrics like Largest Contentful Paint or First Input Delay.

This distinction changes the game. Simply optimizing server response time is no longer enough. The user must see and interact quickly with your content. It’s this overall experience that matters.

  • Google distinguishes binary: very slow versus normal, no fine grading of rankings based on speed
  • Massive indirect effects: user behavior (bouncing, engagement) impacts ranking more than pure speed
  • Crucial perceived speed: display of useful content takes precedence over raw technical performance
  • Penalty threshold: very slow sites incur a penalty, but beyond an acceptable level, the marginal gain is low

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, and it's even refreshing to see Google acknowledge that speed is not the alpha and omega of SEO. On the ground, we've observed for years that moderately fast sites with excellent content outperform ultra-fast sites lacking value.

However, the binary distinction of slow/normal remains blurry. Google doesn’t provide a numeric threshold. Where does "very slow" begin? 3 seconds? 5 seconds? This imprecision leaves practitioners in a gray area. [To verify] against a corpus of competing sites to calibrate your own benchmark.

What qualifications should we make regarding this assertion?

The statement implies that speed optimization has a diminishing return for pure SEO. Moving from 4 seconds to 2 seconds can unlock a situation. Moving from 1.2 seconds to 0.9 seconds changes nothing in direct ranking.

But beware: in certain sectors like e-commerce, speed directly influences conversions. A site that loses 10% of revenue due to 500 milliseconds too long can't settle for being "fast enough" for Google. The business equation differs from the SEO equation.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

On mobile, the tolerance is even lower. Mobile users are more impatient, connections are more variable. A site that becomes "very slow" on 4G while normal on WiFi will face a mobile-first penalty.

News sites or emergency services (weather, health, transport) have an extreme sensitivity to loading time. Google knows the user is looking for quick information. In these niches, speed becomes a stronger quality signal than elsewhere.

Warning: Don't overlook Core Web Vitals just because speed isn’t a major ranking factor. These metrics influence user experience and thus the behavioral signals that Google indirectly relies on.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to avoid penalties?

Start by measuring your actual speed using PageSpeed Insights, Lighthouse, or WebPageTest. Focus on user-oriented metrics: LCP, FID, CLS. If your LCP exceeds 2.5 seconds, you are probably in the danger zone.

Next, identify bottlenecks: unoptimized images, blocking JavaScript, high server time. Fix gross issues before nitpicking over microseconds. The Pareto principle applies: 20% of effort eliminates 80% of slowdowns.

What mistakes should be avoided in speed optimization?

Do not sacrifice functionality at the altar of performance. Disabling useful scripts to gain 0.3 seconds can degrade user experience and hurt your conversions. Find the balance.

Avoid also focusing solely on the PageSpeed score. A score of 95/100 is not always better than an 80/100 if the user perceives the same speed. Google looks at real experience (CrUX data), not just lab tests.

How can I check if my site is in the "normal" zone and not "very slow"?

Use Search Console, Core Web Vitals section. Google indicates problematic URLs based on ground data. If most of your pages are classified as "Good URLs", you can rest easy on the SEO speed front.

Also, compare yourself to your direct competitors. If you are in the industry average and your bounce rate remains acceptable, you are probably not penalized. The competitive context matters: in a niche where everyone is slow, being moderately fast is enough.

  • Measure your Core Web Vitals (LCP, FID, CLS) with Search Console and PageSpeed Insights
  • Optimize images: modern formats (WebP, AVIF), compression, lazy loading
  • Reduce blocking JavaScript: defer, async, code splitting
  • Improve server time: cache, CDN, high-performance hosting
  • Monitor mobile experience: penalties are stricter than on desktop
  • Test regularly: speed drifts with added features
Speed optimization requires precise diagnosis and sometimes complex technical trade-offs. Between cache management, choosing an appropriate CDN, optimizing code, and monitoring Core Web Vitals, there are many levers. If your team lacks expertise on these topics or if you want a detailed audit comparing your site to the competition, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate gains. Personalized support allows for prioritizing high ROI optimizations without degrading user experience.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site très rapide aura-t-il un avantage SEO sur un site moyennement rapide ?
Non, selon cette déclaration. Google distingue surtout les sites très lents des autres. Au-delà d'un seuil de performance acceptable, gagner quelques centièmes de seconde n'améliore pas le classement direct.
Quel seuil de vitesse Google considère-t-il comme "très lent" ?
Google ne donne pas de chiffre précis. En pratique, un LCP supérieur à 2,5 secondes sur mobile est souvent considéré comme problématique. Consulte la Search Console pour voir si tes URLs sont marquées "lentes".
Les Core Web Vitals sont-elles vraiment importantes si la vitesse n'est pas un facteur majeur ?
Oui, car elles influencent le comportement utilisateur. Un mauvais CLS ou un FID élevé génèrent frustration et rebond, ce qui impacte indirectement ton classement via les signaux d'engagement.
Dois-je prioriser la vitesse ou le contenu dans ma stratégie SEO ?
Le contenu reste prioritaire. Un contenu excellent sur un site moyennement rapide bat un contenu médiocre sur un site ultra-rapide. Assure-toi simplement de ne pas être dans la catégorie "très lent".
La vitesse a-t-elle le même impact sur mobile et desktop ?
Non, l'impact est plus fort sur mobile. Les utilisateurs mobiles sont moins patients et les connexions plus variables. Google pénalise davantage les sites lents sur mobile dans un contexte mobile-first.
🏷 Related Topics
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