Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 2:22 Why does Google index new sites slowly and how can you speed up the process?
- 4:27 Is it really necessary to limit your page indexing to rank better?
- 8:28 Do links really follow the canonical URLs on both sides?
- 11:39 Do Google manual penalties really require you to disavow every toxic link?
- 15:09 Do you really need to disavow nofollow, UGC, or sponsored links?
- 16:25 Is it really necessary to disavow your toxic backlinks?
- 23:02 Is duplicate content truly safe for your SEO?
- 29:08 Does AMP really impact Google rankings?
- 36:26 Could disavowing links actually harm your site’s reputation with Google?
- 39:42 Does Google really overlook your SEO mistakes instead of penalizing you?
- 41:28 Is Technical SEO Perfection Really More Important Than Content Quality?
- 45:29 Does Google really disregard everything on a 404 page?
Google Search Console only displays a representative sample of your backlinks, not the entirety. The filter by link type (nofollow, disavow) is not applied in this report — you see a global overview without distinction. In practice, it is impossible to rely solely on GSC to audit your links: third-party tools remain essential for a comprehensive view.
What you need to understand
What does "representative sample" really mean?
When Google talks about a sample, it means that the console does not crawl and display every URL pointing to your site. It compiles a selection — certainly broad — but partial. The term "representative" suggests that Google selects the most significant links according to its own criteria: page authority, crawl frequency, thematic proximity, anchor used.
In practice, you can have thousands of backlinks detected by tools like Ahrefs or Majestic, and see only a fraction of them in GSC. This is not a bug — it is the normal functioning. Google does not guarantee the completeness of this report anywhere.
Why doesn't Google filter by link type?
The key information here: GSC does not distinguish between nofollow, sponsored, UGC, or disavowed links in this report. All appear mixed. The console shows what Googlebot has discovered, period. If you have disavowed a domain via the disavow file, it will continue to appear in the links report — simply, Google ignores it algorithmically.
This lack of filtering poses an analysis problem: it is impossible to know at a glance how many of your backlinks are actually "active" for PageRank. You need to cross-reference with other sources — crawl your own backlinks, check the rel attributes, analyze the anchors — to segment follow vs nofollow.
How reliable is this sample for a link audit?
GSC remains the most reliable tool to see what Google actually knows. Unlike third-party crawlers that reconstruct the web, Google shows you what it has indexed and considered (or ignored). It is a tangible truth, but partial.
The risk: focusing only on the links visible in GSC and neglecting toxic backlinks or undetected opportunities. A serious SEO audit always combines GSC + Ahrefs/Majestic + manual crawling of the source pages. GSC is a starting point, never an endpoint.
- GSC displays a sample, not the complete inventory of your backlinks — this is not a bug, it is intentional.
- No filter by link attribute (nofollow, disavow, sponsored) is applied in this report.
- Disavowed links continue to appear in GSC — they are simply ignored by the ranking algorithm.
- Always cross-reference GSC with third-party tools for a comprehensive view of your link profile.
- GSC shows what Google has crawled and indexed, which remains the most reliable data for SEO analysis — but incomplete.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. All SEO practitioners have known for years that GSC only lists a portion of the backlinks. The discrepancies between GSC and Ahrefs can reach a factor of 5 to 10 depending on the sites. What surprises is that Google is finally officially acknowledging it: it's a sample, not an inventory.
The unresolved question: what criteria determine this sample? Google remains vague. Is it based on the PageRank of the source page? The crawl frequency of the domain? The age of the link? We can assume that the most "important" links according to the algorithm are favored — but no official confirmation. [To be verified]
What nuances should be added?
The first nuance: the sample varies over time. A backlink may appear one month, disappear the next month, then reappear. This is not necessarily a sign of de-indexation — just a refresh of the sample. Don't panic if an "important" link temporarily disappears from the report.
The second nuance: the most recent links take time to appear. Googlebot must discover the source page, crawl it, identify the link, and then add it to the sample. Expect several weeks — sometimes months — between the publication of a backlink and its appearance in GSC. A normal delay, not a technical issue.
In what cases does this rule really pose a problem?
Critical case: detection of negative SEO. If someone sends you thousands of spam links from shady domains, GSC will only show you a fraction of the attack. You risk underestimating the scope of the problem and only disavowing part of the toxic domains.
Another scenario: link audit for a manual penalty. Google asks you to clean up your backlinks to lift a penalty? It's impossible to do it properly with GSC alone. You need to combine several sources — Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush — to identify all problematic links. GSC is not enough. Period.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to audit your backlinks?
Always start by exporting the GSC links report — this is your reference base. Download the complete list of domains pointing to your site, then the examples of source pages. This initial export gives you the sample that Google considers representative.
Next, combine with at least two third-party tools: Ahrefs for the broadest coverage, Majestic for historical metrics (Trust Flow, Citation Flow). Cross-reference the three sources in a spreadsheet: identify the domains present in Ahrefs/Majestic but absent from GSC — and vice versa. Links visible only in GSC deserve attention: Google knows them, third parties do not.
What mistakes should you avoid when analyzing backlinks?
Classic mistake: panicking if an important backlink disappears from GSC. As mentioned earlier, the sample fluctuates. First check if the link still exists on the source page (manual crawl or third-party tool). If it’s still there, it’s just a refresh of the sample — not a real loss.
Another trap: ignoring nofollow links visible in GSC. Yes, Google says they do not directly influence rankings — but their presence in GSC indicates that Googlebot has crawled them and considered them in its understanding of your profile. An abnormal volume of nofollow could indicate a problem (spam, unnatural profile). Analyze them nonetheless.
How to integrate this reality into your SEO strategy?
Automate the tracking of backlinks with a third-party tool configured to crawl your profile every week. Ahrefs Alerts or Majestic Site Explorer allow you to receive notifications as soon as a new backlink is detected — long before it appears in GSC. Anticipation > reaction.
For high-stakes sites, set up cross-monitoring GSC + third-party tool. If a domain appears in Ahrefs but not in GSC after several months, two hypotheses: either Google has not yet crawled it (check the indexing of the source page), or it deems it irrelevant for the sample. In both cases, it remains actionable.
- Monthly export the complete links report from GSC — keep a history to detect variations.
- Cross-reference GSC with Ahrefs and Majestic for a 360° view of your backlink profile.
- Never disavow a domain without checking its presence in multiple sources — GSC alone is not enough.
- Set up automatic alerts on Ahrefs or Majestic to be notified of new backlinks as soon as they are detected.
- Audit your backlinks at least quarterly — every month if you are in a competitive industry or at risk of negative SEO.
- Document your disavows in a separate file with the date and reason — GSC does not keep a detailed history.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Pourquoi certains de mes backlinks apparaissent dans Ahrefs mais pas dans Google Search Console ?
Les liens désavoués via le fichier disavow apparaissent-ils toujours dans le rapport de liens GSC ?
Comment savoir si un backlink nofollow visible dans GSC est réellement pris en compte par Google ?
À quelle fréquence Google met-il à jour le rapport de liens dans Search Console ?
Dois-je m'inquiéter si le nombre de backlinks dans GSC diminue brusquement ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 08/01/2021
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