Official statement
Other statements from this video 19 ▾
- 1:38 Pourquoi les outils SEO et Google Analytics ne montrent-ils pas les mêmes impacts après une Core Update ?
- 1:38 Pourquoi les classements post-Core Update évoluent-ils à des vitesses différentes selon vos outils ?
- 2:39 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter de ses backlinks et utiliser le fichier disavow ?
- 2:39 Faut-il vraiment surveiller tous ses backlinks ou Google exagère-t-il le risque ?
- 4:10 Le contenu généré par les utilisateurs pèse-t-il vraiment autant que votre contenu éditorial aux yeux de Google ?
- 6:51 Faut-il vraiment utiliser noindex pour gérer la visibilité du contenu interne ?
- 6:51 Faut-il utiliser le noindex pour tester un contenu avant de l'indexer ?
- 6:57 Google a-t-il vraiment un algorithme YMYL spécifique pour la santé et la finance ?
- 9:05 Faut-il vraiment isoler les contenus sensibles dans des sous-domaines séparés ?
- 10:31 Faut-il cloisonner les sections éditoriales d'un site pour booster sa visibilité dans Google ?
- 14:49 Le contenu white label nuit-il vraiment à votre indexation Google ?
- 22:02 Faut-il vraiment s'inscrire à Google News pour apparaître dans Discover ?
- 32:08 Comment Google News affiche-t-il les extraits de presse française sous la directive droit voisin ?
- 34:25 Comment optimiser pour Google Discover sans cibler de mots-clés ?
- 39:12 Google Discover privilégie-t-il vraiment la qualité sur le taux de clics ?
- 49:44 Faut-il vraiment utiliser le code 410 plutôt que le 404 pour accélérer la désindexation ?
- 53:59 404 ou 410 : Google fait-il vraiment la différence sur le long terme ?
- 54:00 Les balises canoniques locales peuvent-elles vraiment booster votre visibilité sans cannibalisation ?
- 57:38 Comment utiliser les balises canoniques pour éviter la cannibalisation entre vos contenus multi-localisations ?
Google claims it does not make a major distinction between UGC and editorial content when it comes to indexing and ranking. All published content is assessed according to the same quality criteria. For SEOs, this means that a poorly moderated forum or a polluted comment section can negatively affect the entire site, but also that quality UGC directly contributes to ranking.
What you need to understand
Does Google really treat UGC like editorial content?
John Mueller cuts through a common misconception: Google does not apply a specific filter to distinguish content produced by you from that generated by your users. All indexable content is evaluated according to the same quality, relevance, and usefulness criteria.
In practical terms? A relevant and detailed comment under an article can enhance the topical authority of the page hosting it. Conversely, hundreds of spam or generic comments can dilute the perceived quality and negatively impact the overall ranking. The engine has no categories of
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Yes and no. On paper, Google does not distinguish between UGC and editorial content. In practice, some review sites or forums seem to benefit from an apparent tolerance for average quality content, likely because their model relies on aggregating multiple opinions. [To verify]: it is not excluded that indirect signals (engagement rate, number of contributors, content age) influence ranking beyond the raw quality of the text.
Tests show that pages with structured and moderated UGC (well-voted Q&A, verified reviews) perform better than orphaned and unengaging editorial pages. But the opposite is equally true: a poorly maintained forum, even if old, can lose positions to well-optimized editorial content. The key lies in the consistency and depth of the indexed content.
What nuances should be added to this Google assertion?
Mueller remains deliberately vague on one point: Google may not distinguish UGC upstream, but it is likely that certain behavioral signals (pogo-sticking, time spent, interactions) weigh differently depending on the nature of the content. A user who skims through 10 reviews in 2 minutes generates a different pattern than a reader who reads a long editorial article—and these patterns influence ranking.
Another nuance: the rel="ugc" attribute exists, and Google officially documents it. Why offer this tag if the engine makes no distinction? Probably to better understand link patterns and refine spam detection models. Saying there is “no major distinction” does not mean there is no distinction—this is an important subtlety.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
Verified review sites, platforms with editorial validation (like Stack Overflow with its reputation system) or heavily moderated forums probably benefit from additional trust signals. Google may not distinguish UGC from editorial content, but it certainly distinguishes a quality ecosystem from a chaotic site.
Moreover, certain types of UGC—short comments, generic one-sentence reviews—offer little semantic value and may be ignored in the relevance calculation, even if they are technically indexed. It is not a question of formal distinction but of weight in the algorithm. Let’s be honest: a comment like “Great article!” will never help your ranking, UGC or not.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should one take on a site hosting UGC?
First action: audit all indexed user content. Use Google Search Console to identify UGC pages that generate impressions but few clicks, or that have an abnormally high bounce rate. These pages likely dilute your overall authority. If a comments section or forum generates no SEO value, make it noindex without hesitation.
Next, structure UGC to maximize its semantic value. Encourage users to write detailed contributions using mandatory fields, writing guides, or quality rating systems (votes, badges). The richer and more structured the user content, the more it positively contributes to the ranking of the host page.
What mistakes should be avoided at all costs?
Never allow unmoderated UGC to be indexed at scale. This is the best way to see your site polluted with spam or weak content that will negatively impact all your pages. Even if Google treats UGC as editorial content, this does not mean it will ignore spam patterns—on the contrary.
Another frequent mistake: using rel="ugc" thinking that it protects the site. This tag does not disindex anything and does not prevent Google from penalizing weak content. It only serves to signal the source of the content, not to neutralize its impact. If the content is poor, it needs to be blocked (noindex) or removed, not just tagged.
How can I check if my site is managing UGC correctly?
Implement UGC quality metrics: ratio of validated vs. deleted contributions, average length of contributions, engagement (votes, responses). If these metrics are low, it’s a signal that UGC is not providing value and should be better managed or disindexed.
Also test the direct SEO impact: create a test page with quality moderated UGC, and another with unmoderated UGC. Compare performance on similar queries. The results will confirm (or refute) that Google indeed ranks UGC based on its intrinsic quality, not its status.
- Audit all indexed UGC sections and identify low-value content (via GSC and analytics)
- Set unmoderated or low-quality user content (generic comments, potential spam) to noindex
- Implement active moderation or community validation systems (votes, reputation, badges)
- Structure UGC with mandatory fields, writing guides, and quality incentives
- Monitor UGC quality metrics: validated/deleted ratio, average length, engagement
- Test the SEO impact of moderated vs unmoderated UGC on similar pages to validate hypotheses
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
L'attribut rel="ugc" protège-t-il mon site du spam utilisateur ?
Dois-je désindexer toutes mes sections commentaires par défaut ?
Un forum ancien avec beaucoup d'UGC faible peut-il perdre des positions à cause de cette déclaration ?
Les avis clients sur une fiche produit sont-ils traités comme du contenu éditorial ?
Dois-je investir dans un système de modération automatique pour l'UGC ?
🎥 From the same video 19
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 16/10/2019
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