Official statement
Other statements from this video 19 ▾
- 3:24 Comment structurer vos URLs internationales pour maximiser votre visibilité géographique ?
- 3:54 Le geo-targeting est-il vraiment nécessaire pour votre stratégie SEO locale ?
- 4:47 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il d'indexer certaines pages de votre site même si elles sont techniquement crawlables ?
- 6:52 Les liens en footer et sidebar ont-ils vraiment un impact SEO ?
- 6:52 Les backlinks sitewide ont-ils encore du poids pour le référencement ?
- 8:26 Pourquoi la canonicalisation multi-pays peut-elle afficher les mauvais prix sur votre site international ?
- 9:56 Hreflang : Google détecte-t-il vraiment vos variations linguistiques sans cette balise ?
- 15:32 Les backlinks récurrents dans les footers et sidebars comptent-ils vraiment pour le ranking ?
- 16:56 Pourquoi vos balises canonical régionales sabotent-elles votre visibilité dans Google ?
- 19:30 Le Schema Markup sans partenariat Google sert-il vraiment à quelque chose ?
- 21:15 Google ne prend qu'un seul prix par produit : comment s'assurer que c'est le bon ?
- 22:39 Les abréviations géographiques sont-elles vraiment comprises par Google ?
- 24:00 Google applique-t-il vraiment des filtres de qualité différents selon le secteur d'activité ?
- 24:48 Google indexe-t-il différemment les contenus AJAX et le HTML classique ?
- 25:36 Les balises de prix multiples peuvent-elles vraiment disqualifier vos rich snippets produits ?
- 27:12 Faut-il vraiment combiner noindex et canonical ou choisir l'un des deux ?
- 28:45 Comment Google évalue-t-il vraiment les entités pour le classement SEO ?
- 41:16 Un certificat SSL gratuit peut-il pénaliser votre référencement naturel ?
- 41:20 Les certificats SSL gratuits sont-ils aussi bons que les payants pour le référencement Google ?
Google states that popular website-building platforms like Wix function well for indexing. The real differentiator lies in the ease of implementation and the advanced SEO capabilities offered. Therefore, the choice of platform should be based on your actual technical needs rather than assumptions about indexability.
What you need to understand
Are Wix and similar platforms really indexable by Google?
The short answer: yes. Public website building systems like Wix, Squarespace, or Webflow have not faced structural indexing issues for several years. The teams behind these platforms have worked with Google to resolve historical blocks—particularly the JavaScript overload that hindered crawling.
What has changed concretely: Google's JavaScript rendering has improved significantly. Dynamically generated pages can now be read, explored, and indexed without major friction. Cases of Wix sites completely missing from the index have become rare, except for intentionally blocking configurations.
What is the real limitation then?
The issue does not lie with raw indexing but rather with advanced SEO capabilities. Mueller points out the gap between what works and what allows for fine-tuning. A Wix site can be indexed without issues, but try modifying the source code of a component to fix a poorly structured tag: you'll quickly hit a wall.
Concrete limitations touch on: semantic markup customization, granular crawl control, detailed management of 301 redirects, server-side loading time optimization, and complex URL structure. In short, anything related to deep technical SEO remains difficult if not impossible on these platforms.
Should you avoid these tools if you want to rank?
No, but you need to understand their relevant uses. A local showcase site of 10 pages with a simple need for geographical visibility? Wix will do the job without problems. An e-commerce site with 5000 products needing to rank on competitive queries? You will struggle.
The ease of creation mentioned by Mueller is real: these platforms allow for rapid publishing without technical skills. But this simplicity comes at a cost in terms of advanced SEO flexibility. The choice should be made with open eyes, based on your actual ranking goals.
- Indexing works on popular platforms like Wix; this is no longer a valid rejection argument.
- The difference lies in advanced SEO capabilities: code control, technical customization, fine-tuning optimizations.
- The choice depends on your needs: simple showcase site vs. complex e-commerce project with strong competition.
- Ease of use comes at a price: less technical friction at the start means less room for optimization later.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement aligned with what we observe in the field?
Yes, and this is a consensus shared by most SEO practitioners for several years. Wix sites do rank for low or moderately competitive queries. We frequently find sites built on these platforms on the first page of Google, especially for local or lightly contested niche queries.
However, Mueller's statement remains intentionally vague on one point: what exactly do we mean by ‘functioning well’? Being indexed is just the basics. Ranking in positions 1-3 for a strategic query with 50 serious competitors is a different story. [To verify] in ultra-competitive sectors like insurance, finance, or travel, where advanced technical capabilities become crucial.
What nuances should we add to this claim?
Mueller talks about “advanced possibilities for SEO” without specifying which ones. Concretely, here’s what often gets stuck: non-optimizable server loading times, imposed URL structures with strange parameters, inability to modify certain HTTP headers, difficulty in implementing complex schema markup, and limited control over critical JS.
Another rarely mentioned point: total dependency on third-party infrastructure. If Wix decides tomorrow to change its rendering system or alter its technical architecture, you are stuck with no ability to react. With a self-hosted CMS like WordPress, you maintain control. This is not just a question of SEO capabilities; it's also a matter of strategic control.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Mueller's statement works for relatively simple sites with standard SEO needs. It collapses as soon as you enter complex cases: multilingual sites with sophisticated hreflang, fine management of duplicate content over thousands of pages, refined crawl budget optimization on a large catalog, custom structured data implementation for specific rich snippets.
If your SEO strategy relies on technical optimization as a competitive advantage, website building platforms will not suffice. It's as simple as that. However, if your differentiation is based on content, UX, or brand authority, then yes, Wix can be a rational choice for rapid startup.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you are on Wix or a similar platform?
Fully utilize the native SEO features offered by the platform: customizable title and meta description tags, automatic XML sitemap, basic robots.txt file, 301 redirects via the interface. Don’t leave anything on automatic if you can control it manually.
Second lever: compensate for technical limitations with quality content. If you cannot finely optimize loading times or code structure, focus on truly differentiating content, well-constructed FAQ pages, and properly implemented basic schema markup. Ranking does not depend solely on technical aspects.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not choose Wix if you know upfront that you will need advanced SEO features within 12 months. Migrating later is costly in terms of time, risk of ranking loss, and technical resources. Be honest about your actual needs before making a choice.
Another classic mistake: believing that automatic indexing is sufficient. Even on Wix, you need to monitor Search Console, check that strategic pages are being crawled, identify 404 errors, and monitor Core Web Vitals. The tool does not do all the work for you.
How can you tell if your current platform is really limiting you?
Ask yourself these questions: can I manually edit my canonical tags? Do I control the structure of my URLs in a granular way? Can I implement custom JS to track specific SEO events? Are my server response times competitive compared to my direct competitors?
If the answer is no on several points and these limitations prevent you from ranking on your target queries, then yes, the platform is becoming a hindrance. However, if you rank well despite these limitations, do not seek to over-optimize: focus on content and acquiring backlinks.
- Ensure all strategic pages are well-indexed through Search Console.
- Maximize the native SEO features of your platform (title, meta, redirects).
- Compensate for technical limitations with truly differentiating and quality content.
- Monitor your Core Web Vitals and fix what is within your reach (images, third-party scripts).
- Honestly evaluate if current limitations are genuinely preventing you from ranking on your targets.
- Anticipate your future SEO needs before committing to a proprietary platform.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que Google pénalise les sites construits sur Wix ou Squarespace ?
Peut-on ranker en première page Google avec un site Wix ?
Quelles sont les principales limites SEO de Wix comparé à WordPress ?
Faut-il migrer de Wix vers WordPress pour améliorer son SEO ?
Les sites Wix ont-ils des problèmes de vitesse de chargement ?
🎥 From the same video 19
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 44 min · published on 10/01/2019
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