Official statement
It is not possible to block image indexing in Google Images while retaining thumbnails in web search results. Robots.txt or HTTP headers block access everywhere, preventing Google from recognizing data and tags.
42:59
Other statements from this video 31 ▾
- 5:03 Why does the removal tool only temporarily conceal your content?
- 7:00 Is the removal tool really a magic fix for your URLs?
- 7:07 Does a temporary URL removal really take effect within 24 hours?
- 9:16 How can you effectively leverage Google's removal tool?
- 10:54 Did you know that Google removes multiple versions of a URL at once?
- 11:05 Did you know that Google's URL removal tool can impact 4 versions at once?
- 11:58 Should you be worried about prefix deletion affecting your SEO traffic?
- 14:03 Why is the removal tool not suitable for normalizing URLs?
- 14:03 Why is the removal tool unsuitable for canonicalization?
- 14:36 Why should you avoid the removal tool during site migrations?
- 15:16 Why is it crucial to redirect during a site migration?
- 16:06 What’s the best way to permanently delete content without leaving any SEO traces?
- 17:12 Is it true that deleting URLs won't fix your manual penalties?
- 27:42 What Should You Do with Empty Pages to Optimize Your SEO?
- 29:51 How does Mobile-First Indexing affect your mobile SEO?
- 29:51 Does having separate URLs for mobile and desktop really hurt your images?
- 30:51 Could Mobile-First Indexing be harming your SEO traffic?
- 32:58 Why are ranking fluctuations a normal part of SEO?
- 32:58 Why do Google rankings keep changing?
- 34:32 Why is Google focused on site reputation abuse regardless of the domain?
- 35:32 Why doesn't domain type impact site reputation abuse?
- 36:37 Should you use noindex on hosted third-party pages to stay in Google's good graces?
- 37:37 Should you use 'noindex' to manage hosted content and protect your site's reputation?
- 39:44 Is relying on an expired domain's past ranking a bad move?
- 39:44 Does buying an expired domain really boost your SEO?
- 40:18 Why won't Google reveal their anti-spam criteria?
- 40:18 Why does Google keep its spam policies under wraps in SEO?
- 42:58 What are the risks of blocking images in robots.txt for your SEO?
- 45:39 Why does Google separate web indexing and image indexing?
- 46:44 How can you regain Google's trust using lastmod tags?
- 46:44 Can we really count on the lastmod field in sitemaps again?
Official statement from
(1 year ago)
⚠ A more recent statement exists on this topic
Should you really avoid lazy-loading for all your images?
View statement →
TL;DR
Google does not allow blocking image indexing while keeping thumbnails visible in web results. Using robots.txt or HTTP headers blocks access entirely. For SEO, this means a binary choice: index or not.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on indexer partiellement des images sur Google?
Non, il n'est pas possible de bloquer certaines images tout en laissant d'autres indexées.
Que se passe-t-il quand on bloque une image avec robots.txt?
Google ne peut pas accéder à l'image du tout, ni pour Google Images ni pour les résultats web.
Les images précédemment indexées sont-elles affectées?
Des actions manuelles peuvent être nécessaires pour les retirer si l'accès est bloqué après coup.
🎥 From the same video 31
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 49 min · published on 30/05/2024
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