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Official statement

Touch targets on a mobile site should have a minimum width and height of 7 millimeters for frequently used elements, and at least 5 millimeters of spacing between touch targets to avoid touch errors on smartphones.
3:32
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 10:33 💬 EN 📅 26/03/2015 ✂ 4 statements
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Other statements from this video 3
  1. 0:02 Le mobile-first indexing impose-t-il vraiment la compatibilité mobile pour ranker ?
  2. 5:16 Pourquoi Google impose-t-il une taille de police de 16px minimum sur mobile ?
  3. 7:23 Pourquoi bloquer CSS et JavaScript dans robots.txt nuit-il à votre crawl mobile ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google sets specific dimensions for mobile touch targets: a minimum of 7 millimeters in width and height for frequently used elements, with at least 5 millimeters of spacing between them. This guideline aims to reduce touch errors that degrade the user experience. For SEO, it's a mobile-first criterion that directly impacts engagement signals and potentially rankings.

What you need to understand

Why does Google require dimensions in millimeters instead of pixels?

The choice of millimeter as the unit of measurement is significant. CSS pixels vary according to screen density, which would make any recommendation vague between an iPhone and a low-end Android.

Roughly converting, 7 millimeters corresponds to about 48 CSS pixels on a standard screen (density ~160 dpi), which aligns with WCAG 2.1 accessibility guidelines. This ensures Google’s criteria remain valid across devices.

What does Google mean by 'frequently used elements'?

This phrasing leaves room for interpretation. It typically refers to main navigation buttons, menu links, CTAs, social icons. A 16px link in the body of text? Probably not included.

The risk is that Google does not provide an exhaustive list. An 'Add to Cart' button clearly fits this category, but what about a 'Learn More' link in the footer? The boundary remains blurry.

Does the 5 millimeter spacing apply in all contexts?

Google talks about avoiding touch errors. In practice, if two buttons are too close together, the user taps between them and nothing happens or the wrong action triggers. This indicates a degraded user experience.

However, this rule can pose challenges in dense layouts: multi-line horizontal menus, tight product grids, mobile toolbars. Adhering to 5 mm everywhere might force a complete rethink of mobile ergonomics.

  • 7 millimeters minimum width and height for frequent touch targets (≈ 48px CSS)
  • 5 millimeters of spacing between targets to avoid false clicks
  • Criterion linked to mobile engagement signals (bounce rate, missed clicks)
  • No official list of 'frequently used elements': to be interpreted based on context
  • Potential impact on mobile-first ranking, although Google doesn’t confirm any direct penalties

SEO Expert opinion

Does this recommendation carry real algorithmic weight?

Google does not explicitly state that the size of touch targets is a ranking factor. What is certain is that a degraded mobile experience (missed clicks, frustration) impacts behavioral metrics: time spent, bounce rate, interactions.

Field tests show that sites with buttons that are too small or poorly spaced have lower mobile conversion rates. Can Google detect this through the Chrome User Experience Report? Probably. Is it a direct ranking signal? [To be verified] — no official statement confirms this formally.

Are the 7 millimeters really an absolute threshold?

In practice, no one pulls out a ruler to measure their buttons. Most modern CSS frameworks (Material Design, Bootstrap) offer buttons of 44-48px minimum height, which roughly aligns.

Let’s be honest: a 6 mm button is unlikely to make your site drop in the SERPs overnight. But multiplied across hundreds of pages and thousands of mobile sessions, micro-frictions add up and degrade the overall experience. It’s a hygiene criterion, not an explosive ranking lever.

What implementation errors do we observe in the field?

First classic error: forgetting padding areas. A 30px text link with 9px padding on each side technically reaches 48px, but if the padding isn't clickable (non-interactive transparent area), the issue persists.

Second trap: badly sized hamburger menus. The icon is often 24px, but this is a critical element. Some developers compensate with an expanded tap area in CSS (padding or pseudo-element), while others do not. Google Search Console’s mobile testing tools do not always detect these nuances.

Attention: Cookie overlays and mobile pop-ups are often the worst offenders. 'Accept' and 'Reject' buttons that are cramped, too small, and impossible to target. Google penalizes intrusive interstitials, but this is also a pure tactile UX problem.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can I check the compliance of my mobile site?

Google does not offer a dedicated tool to measure touch dimensions in millimeters. The mobile optimization test in Search Console can flag spacing issues but remains imprecise. Chrome DevTools allows you to enable touch inspection mode ('Show tap regions'), but this is manual.

The most reliable method: real user testing on various devices. An iPhone 13 Pro Max and a Samsung A12 do not have the same virtual finger size. Heatmaps (Hotjar, Crazy Egg) reveal areas where clicks are missed.

What elements should I prioritize in the audit?

Start with critical conversion points: CTA buttons, main menu links, cart icons, contact forms. Then, inspect high-density areas: footers, e-commerce filter bars, tag navigation.

Inline links in the body text are less critical, unless they trigger significant actions (downloads, sign-ups). A 'source' link at the bottom of an article can remain at 14px, no one will penalize you for that.

Do I need to completely overhaul my site if it’s not compliant?

No. Prioritize fixes based on impact: navigation, CTAs, forms first. Secondary elements (footer links, rarely used social icons) can wait for a broader redesign cycle.

If your mobile conversion rate is already acceptable and engagement metrics show no friction, the urgency is relative. However, if you notice a mobile bounce rate 20% higher than desktop, that’s a red flag.

  • Measure the dimensions of main CTA buttons and navigation links (goal: ≥ 48px)
  • Check the spacing between adjacent touch targets (goal: ≥ 5 mm / ~30px)
  • Test on real devices (iOS, Android, small/large screen sizes)
  • Analyze heatmaps and missed clicks to identify problematic areas
  • Audit mobile overlays and pop-ups (cookies, newsletters, promotions)
  • Correct priority for high traffic and conversion pages (homepage, product pages, checkout)
Optimizing mobile touch areas is as much about UX as it is about technical SEO. The impacts on ranking remain indirect, but the gains in conversion and engagement are measurable. These adjustments may seem minor, but implementing them requires cross-disciplinary expertise: design, front-end development, behavioral analysis. If your internal team lacks the resources or time to conduct a comprehensive audit and deploy fixes consistently across the site, working with a specialized SEO agency can speed up the process and ensure lasting compliance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les 7 millimètres s'appliquent-ils aussi aux liens texte classiques dans les articles ?
Non, Google cible les « éléments fréquemment utilisés ». Un lien inline dans un paragraphe n'est généralement pas concerné, sauf s'il déclenche une action critique (téléchargement, inscription).
Comment convertir les 7 millimètres en pixels CSS pour mes boutons ?
Sur un écran standard (~160 dpi), 7 mm correspondent à environ 48 pixels CSS. Cette valeur coïncide avec les recommandations WCAG 2.1 et la plupart des guidelines Material Design ou iOS.
Google pénalise-t-il directement les sites qui ne respectent pas ces dimensions ?
Aucune déclaration officielle ne confirme de pénalité algorithmique directe. L'impact passe par les métriques d'expérience utilisateur (taux de rebond, clics manqués) qui, elles, influencent le ranking mobile.
Les zones de padding comptent-elles dans les 7 millimètres de hauteur/largeur ?
Oui, à condition que le padding soit interactif (zone cliquable). Un padding CSS transparent qui n'étend pas la zone de tap ne résout pas le problème.
Dois-je espacer tous les éléments de 5 millimètres, y compris dans les grilles de produits ?
Google recommande 5 mm entre cibles tactiles pour éviter les erreurs de toucher. Dans les layouts denses (grilles e-commerce), priorise l'espacement sur les actions principales (boutons « Ajouter », liens produit) plutôt que sur chaque élément.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Mobile SEO

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