What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

The variation in font size (14px vs 12px) on a page does not affect ranking. The only important consideration is mobile compatibility, which remains a ranking factor. The rest pertains to user experience.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 985h14 💬 EN 📅 26/02/2021 ✂ 39 statements
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  27. 529:29 Is it really necessary to duplicate all country codes in hreflang for targeting multiple regions?
  28. 531:48 Why does hreflang in Latin America require each country code individually?
  29. 574:05 Does PageSpeed Insights really measure your site's performance?
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

John Mueller states: varying the font size between 14px and 12px has no impact on Google ranking. The only technical constraint is mobile compatibility, which remains a confirmed ranking factor. Everything else is about ergonomics and conversion rate optimization, not the algorithm.

What you need to understand

What exactly does Google say about font size and SEO?

Mueller cuts short a recurring debate: the variation in CSS font size between 14px, 12px, or any other value is not included in ranking criteria. No ranking signal is computed from these typographic variations.

The only factor that matters is mobile compatibility. If your font is unreadable on a smartphone (too small, too light, requiring zoom), you will fail the mobile-friendliness test. And this test is a confirmed ranking factor since mobile-first indexing.

Why does this confusion persist among SEOs?

Because user experience and SEO often overlap without being identical. A font that is too small degrades behavioral metrics: time on page, bounce rate, scrolling depth. Google observes these signals through Chrome and Android.

But Mueller clearly separates two registers: what falls under the direct ranking signal (mobile-friendliness) and what remains within the realm of pure UX (readability, visual comfort, accessibility). The boundary is clear, even if the indirect consequences intertwine.

What is the technical limit of this statement?

Mueller talks about normal CSS variations. He does not cover extreme cases: a 6px font would likely be flagged by the mobile-friendliness algorithm, even though technically it is an issue of UX and not font size per se.

The nuance lies in automatic detection. Google checks that the text is readable without zoom on mobile. If your font passes this test, you are good. If it fails, you lose mobile-friendly status, and yes, you will drop in mobile SERPs.

  • No direct ranking signal related to variations in CSS font size (14px vs 12px)
  • Mobile compatibility remains mandatory: text must be readable without zoom on smartphones
  • UX and SEO are distinct: poor readability impacts engagement, not crawling or indexing
  • Behavioral metrics may be indirectly affected (time spent, bounce) without becoming explicit ranking signals

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with what we observe in the field?

Yes, and that is reassuring. We see no correlation between font size and organic positions in large-scale analyses. Top-ranking sites display font sizes from 12px to 18px without a detectable pattern. No measurable advantage for larger sizes.

However, we observe an indirect impact through behavioral signals. Text in 11px on mobile generates more bounces, less time spent, and these metrics can influence quality perception by the algorithm — but through channels other than the font size itself. An essential nuance.

What gray areas remain despite this clarification?

Mueller does not specify at what exact size Google considers that text fails the mobile test. We know that below 12px, the risks increase, but there is no officially documented threshold. [Check] on your own templates via Search Console.

Another blind spot: accessibility. Google has never confirmed that WCAG criteria (contrast, minimum size for the visually impaired) are ranking factors. Yet, with the advent of Core Web Vitals, it’s hinted that accessibility could become a signal over time. For now, it’s pure UX, not direct SEO.

Should we ignore typography in an SEO strategy?

No, that would be a mistake. Typography influences conversion rate, quality perception, content memorization. A well-designed site retains visitors better, generates more natural backlinks, and improves branding signals.

Let's be honest: Google does not directly rank based on font size, but it ranks based on engagement, retention, social shares, mentions. And all these signals are fed by a comfortable reading experience. The loop is closed — indirectly.

Warning: Do not confuse the absence of a direct signal with the absence of impact. Poor typography degrades the entire experience, which ultimately affects your visibility through other levers (bounce rate, backlinks, organic CTR).

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you check specifically on your pages?

First, test for mobile compatibility via Search Console and Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test. It’s the only confirmed ranking criterion by Mueller in this context. If your pages pass this test, you are compliant in terms of pure SEO.

Next, analyze your behavioral metrics in Google Analytics 4: average time per page, bounce rate, scrolling depth. If these indicators are abnormally low on certain pages, readability may be an issue — even if it's not a direct ranking signal, it affects your overall performance.

What typographical errors should you absolutely avoid?

Never go below 12px on mobile for body text. Even if technically Google does not penalize size per se, you risk failing the mobile-friendliness test. And then, you lose the

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une police de 12px peut-elle faire échouer le test mobile-friendly de Google ?
Non, si elle reste lisible sans zoom sur smartphone. Google vérifie la lisibilité globale, pas une taille minimale stricte. Le seuil critique se situe généralement en dessous de 12px, mais le contraste et l'espacement jouent aussi.
Les Core Web Vitals sont-ils affectés par la taille de police ?
Indirectement oui, via le CLS. Un changement de police après chargement peut provoquer un layout shift si les dimensions ne sont pas réservées. Mais la taille en elle-même n'impacte ni le LCP ni l'INP.
Faut-il utiliser des unités relatives (rem, em) plutôt que des pixels pour le SEO ?
Non, Google ne fait pas de distinction entre px, rem ou em. Utilisez ce qui facilite votre workflow. L'important est que le résultat final soit lisible sur mobile, quelle que soit l'unité CSS employée.
Une police variable (font-size responsive) améliore-t-elle le classement ?
Non, pas directement. Elle améliore l'UX sur différents écrans, ce qui peut réduire le taux de rebond et améliorer l'engagement. Mais ce n'est pas un signal de ranking en soi.
Google pénalise-t-il les textes cachés via font-size:0 ou color:transparent ?
Oui, c'est considéré comme du cloaking ou du keyword stuffing. Mueller parle ici de variations normales de taille de police pour la lisibilité, pas de techniques de manipulation. Ces pratiques restent sanctionnables.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Mobile SEO

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