Official statement
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- 22:42 Are JavaScript links without href really invisible to Google?
- 23:12 Why does Google ignore your poorly formatted JavaScript links?
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- 29:55 Is high-quality content really enough to generate natural backlinks?
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- 38:17 Does Google really declare its user-agent while crawling?
- 43:06 Does Google really understand all video embedding formats for SEO?
- 44:12 Do blocked third-party cookies really affect your mobile traffic in Analytics?
- 51:11 Should you ditch the desktop version to solely optimize the mobile version?
Mueller reminds us that Moz's Domain Authority is not a Google ranking signal — contrary to what some practitioners still believe. This metric remains a useful proxy to track a site's evolution, but it does not directly reflect Mountain View's algorithm. Focus on official signals: quality backlinks, relevant content, and E-E-A-T signals rather than a third-party score that has no direct impact on your positions.
What you need to understand
Why does Google insist so much on this point?
For years, Moz's Domain Authority (DA) has become an essential metric in the SEO industry. The problem: many confuse this third-party indicator with a true Google ranking signal.
Mueller sets the record straight. Google does not use DA — nor any similar external metric like Ahrefs' Domain Rating or Majestic's Trust Flow. These tools model their own vision of authority, often relying on partial crawls and proprietary algorithms that do not reflect the reality of Google's index.
What is the difference between real authority and Domain Authority?
Moz's DA primarily relies on the backlink profile of a domain, weighted according to their own proprietary PageRank. It's an approximation — sometimes relevant, sometimes misleading.
True authority in Google is multifactorial: quality and relevance of inbound links, of course, but also E-E-A-T signals, domain history, user behavior, thematic consistency, content freshness… so many dimensions that DA does not capture or captures poorly. A site can have a DA of 40 and rank ahead of a DA 70 if its topical authority and relevance are superior for a given query.
Why do so many SEOs continue to refer to it?
Because DA remains a convenient shortcut. It provides a single and easy-to-communicate indicator, especially in front of non-technical clients or decision-makers who want 'a number'.
But it's a comfortable illusion. This score can mask structural weaknesses — toxic link profile, thin content, internal cannibalization — that undermine your positions despite a high number displayed. Conversely, a young site with a modest DA can explode if it targets the right search intent and builds strong thematic authority.
- DA is not a Google ranking signal — it is a third-party metric with no direct link to Googleplex's algorithm.
- Google evaluates authority through a complex set of signals: quality backlinks, E-E-A-T, thematic relevance, user behavior.
- DA remains a useful proxy for internal monitoring and competitive comparison, as long as it is not the sole decision criterion.
- A site with a high DA can underperform if its content is weak or poorly optimized for search intent.
- Conversely, a modest DA does not prevent ranking if the topical authority and relevance are in place.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Absolutely. Regular audits show that DA correlates poorly with actual performance in the SERPs. I've seen DA 25 sites explode on competitive queries against DA 60+ sites that stagnate, simply because they had built real thematic authority and a strong internal linking structure.
DA can mask serious structural problems: spammed link profile, over-optimized anchor text, duplicate content. Google will penalize these sites despite a flattering score. Conversely, a new site with few backlinks but an excellent organic click-through rate and high session time can climb rapidly — the DA will lag behind because Moz crawls less frequently than Google.
Should we completely ignore Domain Authority?
No. Important nuance: DA remains an acceptable internal steering tool, especially for tracking a domain's evolution over time or comparing competitors with the same scope. But it should never be the only KPI.
In link building, I use it as a quick filter during sourcing — a DA < 20 often warrants a manual review before acquisition. But this is just a first filter. The key lies elsewhere: thematic relevance of the linking site, editorial quality, actual organic traffic (via SEMrush or SimilarWeb), and a clean link profile. [To be verified]: Some claim that a link from a DA 30 thematically aligned site beats a general DA 70 — field confirms, but Google does not document this weighting.
What risks are there if we optimize for DA instead of Google?
You risk wasting budget on unnecessary links. Platforms sell 'DA 50+' links sourced from PBNs or zombie sites with zero real traffic. The DA artificially rises, but Google passes no juice — worse, you might trigger a Penguin filter if the profile becomes suspicious.
Another pitfall: neglecting on-page optimization and user experience because 'the DA is rising'. Let's be honest: a high DA never compensates for mediocre content or a shaky architecture. I've seen DA 70 sites lose 60% of their traffic after a Core Update because they focused on link volume at the expense of editorial quality.
Practical impact and recommendations
What indicators should you track instead of Domain Authority?
Prioritize Search Console data: impressions, clicks, average CTR, average position per query and per page. It is the most reliable source for measuring your actual visibility in Google. Complement this with position tracking for your strategic keywords using a rank tracker (SEMrush, Ahrefs, Ranks).
In terms of link building, measure the number of quality referring domains (filter: organic traffic > 1000/month, aligned theme, no high spam score). Also, monitor your anchor text profile evolution to avoid over-optimization. Finally, keep an eye on your Core Web Vitals and UX metrics — Google increasingly incorporates them into its scoring.
How can you assess the quality of a backlink without relying on DA?
Systematic manual checklist. First, check the actual organic traffic of the linking site (Ahrefs, SEMrush, SimilarWeb). A site with no traffic is often a PBN or a repurposed expired domain — useless or even dangerous.
Next, examine thematic relevance: is the linking site's content coherent with your niche? A link from a cooking blog to a B2B SaaS makes no contextual sense; Google will devalue it. Inspect the outbound link profile: if the site is doing massive link spamming (50+ outbound links per article), run away. Finally, check the domain's Google indexing using site:domain.com — if nothing appears, the site is deindexed or penalized.
What should you do if your competitors have a much higher DA than yours?
Don't panic. DA is not the match. First, identify their real strengths: is it a massive backlink profile, domain age, or true thematic authority? Use Ahrefs Content Gap or SEMrush Keyword Gap to spot queries where they rank and you do not.
Next, leverage your advantages: more recent and updated content, better user experience, a more precise response to search intent, optimized internal linking. Build your topical authority by deep publishing on subtopics neglected by larger competitors. The traffic will follow, and the DA will too — but in that order, not the reverse.
- Abandon DA as your main KPI — switch to Search Console, average positions, and segmented organic traffic.
- Evaluate each potential backlink based on actual traffic, thematic relevance, and outbound link profile, not on a Moz score.
- Prioritize building thematic authority: content clusters, internal linking, demonstrated expertise (E-E-A-T).
- Monitor your Core Web Vitals and UX metrics — Google incorporates them into its scoring with increasing precision.
- Compare yourself to competitors using real Google metrics (positions, share of voice), not third-party proxies.
- If you manage large-scale link building, automate initial filtering by DA but manually validate each link before acquisition.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google utilise-t-il une métrique d'autorité de domaine interne similaire au DA de Moz ?
Un site avec un DA faible peut-il quand même bien ranker dans Google ?
Faut-il totalement ignorer le Domain Authority dans une stratégie SEO ?
Comment évaluer la qualité d'un backlink sans regarder le DA du site donneur ?
Quels indicateurs suivre à la place du DA pour mesurer l'autorité de mon site ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 03/04/2020
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