Official statement
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- 14:51 Faut-il vraiment garder le robots.txt ouvert sur les domaines redirigés en 301 ?
- 16:25 Les balises H1, H2, H3 ont-elles vraiment un impact sur le classement Google ?
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- 21:06 Les mentions de marque sans lien ont-elles un impact sur le classement Google ?
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Google views content obscured behind interactions (accordions, tabs, buttons) as less important for ranking. This official stance confirms that the search engine prioritizes what is immediately visible on the screen. For SEO practitioners, this means that directly displaying critical information remains the safest strategy, even if hidden content is not completely ignored.
What you need to understand
Why does Google make this distinction between visible and hidden content?
The search engine primarily aims to evaluate the actual user experience. Immediately visible content requires no further action, which better reflects the immediate value of a page. Google assumes that a visitor first looks at what appears without any interaction.
This approach aligns with a prioritization of information. If you hide text behind a "Read more" button or an accordion, you implicitly signal that this content is secondary. Google interprets this structure as an indicator of editorial priority.
What exactly does Google mean by "hidden content"?
The definition covers several scenarios: accordions and tabs that require a click to reveal text, popups triggered by interaction, "expand" or "read more" sections, and even some content loaded via JavaScript after a user event.
Mobile complicates this equation. Content that is hidden by default on smartphones to save vertical space falls into this category, even if this practice is common for UX. Google recognizes this reality but maintains its position: what requires action remains less prioritized.
Does this rule apply absolutely?
No, and this is where nuance matters. Google does not say that hidden content is ignored or penalized, but that it carries less weight in the ranking equation. The difference is substantial for a practitioner.
Field tests show that pages with accordion content can rank well, especially if the structure follows a justified UX logic. The issue arises when this practice becomes a means of keyword stuffing without degrading the appearance of the page.
- Clear prioritization: visibility first is considered most important by Google
- No total exclusion: hidden content is crawled and indexed, but with lesser algorithmic weight
- Mobile first: the rule also applies on mobile, where hiding content is a UX necessity
- Intent matters: Google tries to detect whether you hide content to manipulate rankings or to enhance the experience
- Variable impact: on very competitive queries, this weight difference can shift ranking
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, generally. Audits on thousands of pages show a correlation between immediately visible content and positions. Sites that directly display their key information without requiring clicks tend to outperform competitors with hidden structures.
But beware of generalizations. Some sectors (notably e-commerce) heavily use accordions for product sheets, and that doesn't prevent them from ranking. The real variable is the density of visible vs hidden information. If 80% of your content is behind clicks, you have a problem. If it's 20% and actually improves navigation, the impact remains marginal.
What gray areas remain in this position?
Mueller's statement lacks quantifiable data. [To verify]: what is the exact weighting coefficient applied to hidden content? Google will never disclose this, but the absence of concrete metrics makes arbitration complex for a practitioner.
Another vague point is the distinction between legitimate UX hiding and manipulative hiding. Google claims to differentiate, but the exact criteria remain opaque. Is an accordion on a FAQ treated as secondary content or a standard UX structure? The answer likely varies based on the context of the page.
In what cases does this rule change the game?
On highly competitive informational queries, every signal counts. If your competitor displays 800 words directly and you hide 400 behind tabs, you start at a disadvantage. The gap widens when other signals (backlinks, authority) are equivalent.
Conversely, in less competitive niches or brand queries, the impact is negligible. If you are the only one addressing a specific topic, Google will rank your page even with hidden content, due to a lack of alternatives. Competitive pressure is the determining factor.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely on an existing site?
Start with a content structure audit. Identify all strategic pages (those generating SEO traffic or targeting priority keywords) and measure the visible/hidden content ratio at initial load. If more than 30% of the text requires a click, you likely have room for optimization.
Next, reorganize the hierarchy. Place the most important information and target keywords in the immediately visible content. Keep accordions or tabs for secondary details, technical specs, or support content that enhances the experience without being critical for ranking.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not fall into the trap of unfolding everything by default if it ruins your UX. A 5000-word page without a clear structure will scare away visitors and degrade your engagement metrics, which can negatively impact your SEO by another means. The goal is balance, not extremity.
Another common mistake: hiding content using CSS opacity or display:none thinking you can bypass the rule. Google detects these techniques and may interpret them as cloaking if the manipulative intent is obvious. If you must hide, do it properly with ARIA attributes and coherent JavaScript logic.
How can you check that the current structure does not penalize the site?
Compare the performance of similar pages with different structures. If your product sheets with accordions consistently underperform those with unfolded content, you have your answer. Use Search Console to identify pages with abnormally low CTR despite good positions: this may signal a relevance issue perceived by Google.
Run A/B tests on a few pilot pages. Unfold hidden content on 50% of the template and measure the position changes over 6-8 weeks. If you see a significant gain, generalize the modification. These structural optimizations may seem simple in theory but often require delicate technical restructuring, especially on sites with thousands of pages. In these cases, hiring a specialized SEO agency can help avoid costly mistakes and provide tailored support to balance SEO and UX constraints.
- Audit the visible/hidden content ratio on strategic pages
- Move priority keywords and critical information to the immediately visible area
- Keep accordions only for secondary or support content
- Test the impact on a sample of pages before generalization
- Monitor positions and traffic for at least 2 months after modification
- Ensure that the structure remains consistent with your target's UX expectations
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les FAQ en accordéon sont-elles pénalisées par cette règle ?
Le contenu caché est-il quand même indexé par Google ?
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle différemment sur mobile et desktop ?
Peut-on contourner cette limitation avec du lazy loading ?
Quel impact si mes concurrents utilisent tous des accordéons ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 07/05/2015
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