Official statement
Other statements from this video 52 ▾
- 0:33 Is it really enough to just have an alt attribute for your graphics and infographics?
- 1:04 Should you use alt text for infographics instead of converting them to HTML?
- 2:17 Is it really necessary to duplicate the text of infographics for Google to index them?
- 2:37 Do you really need to duplicate your infographics' content in text for Google?
- 3:41 Why can a site that steals your content rank better than you?
- 4:13 Why isn't optimizing a single SEO factor ever enough to outpace a competitor?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait before reacting to ranking fluctuations?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait for ranking fluctuations to stabilize before taking action?
- 8:58 Do outgoing links to authoritative sites really boost your Google ranking?
- 8:58 Can deep linking to a mobile app really boost your website's SEO?
- 10:32 Site Restructuring: Why does Google recommend redirects over reverse proxy?
- 10:32 Is it true that Google advises against using reverse proxies for migrating from a subdomain to a subfolder?
- 12:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to mask Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to hide Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:50 Is it true that the highest number in Search Console is usually the right one?
- 14:44 Should you really put empty user profile pages on no-index?
- 16:57 Do multiple redirect chains really hinder Google's crawling?
- 17:02 Are Multiple Redirect Chains Really Hurting Your SEO?
- 19:57 Do domain migrations and mergers really cause SEO penalties?
- 19:58 Could separating each step of a site migration save you weeks of SEO diagnostics?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really penalize your organic SEO?
- 24:41 Should you overlook historical Mobile Usability errors in Search Console?
- 24:41 Should you ignore mobile errors in Search Console if the live test comes back clean?
- 25:50 Is it true that using nofollow on internal menu links can control PageRank?
- 25:50 Should you really nofollow your menu links to optimize crawling?
- 26:46 Do Google Ads scripts really slow down your site in the eyes of PageSpeed Insights?
- 27:06 Does Google Ads really penalize the speed of your pages in PageSpeed Insights?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for a perfect 100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 35:45 Do image metadata really influence rankings in Google Images?
- 35:45 Can image metadata really enhance your SEO performance?
- 36:29 How many internal links per page should you have to optimize your structure without hindering crawl efficiency?
- 37:19 What is the optimal number of internal links per page for SEO?
- 37:54 Does a completely flat site structure really hurt SEO?
- 39:52 Should you still use disavow or has Google truly automated the ignoring of spam links?
- 40:02 Should you still disavow spammy links pointing to your site?
- 41:04 Does the FAQ schema work if the answers are hidden in an accordion?
- 41:04 Is it possible to mark a main page with FAQ schema, or is a dedicated page necessary?
- 41:59 Is it really necessary to have a dedicated page for each video to rank on Google?
- 41:59 Should you create a separate page for each video instead of grouping them together?
- 43:42 How does Google choose which sitelinks to display under your search results?
- 44:13 Does Google really control sitelinks through site structure?
- 45:19 Has PageRank really become a negligible ranking factor for Google?
- 45:19 Is PageRank still a top-ranking factor that you should keep an eye on?
- 46:46 Should you always use the Video Object schema for YouTube embeds subject to GDPR?
- 46:53 Do YouTube two-click embeds really hurt video SEO?
- 50:12 Are mobile interstitials truly all penalized by Google?
- 50:43 Is it really possible to show different interstitials based on traffic source without SEO risk?
- 52:08 Is it true that Google ignores GDPR interstitials without penalizing your SEO?
- 53:08 Can we truly measure the SEO impact of intrusive interstitials?
- 53:18 Do intrusive interstitials really have a measurable impact on your SEO?
Google states that user profile pages with little content typically do not penalize the rest of the site. The search engine focuses on pages it considers important and naturally ignores empty profiles. Noindex only becomes relevant in two specific cases: massive spam on profiles or gigantic volume (millions) that blocks the crawling of key pages.
What you need to understand
Does Google really penalize sites with numerous empty profiles?
Not at all, and it’s a persistent misconception in the SEO community. Google does not devalue an entire site simply because it hosts thousands of incomplete user profiles. The ranking system evaluates each page individually and focuses on those that provide value to users.
Underfilled profiles are simply ignored in relevance calculations. They do not incur an algorithmic penalty, do not dilute the domain’s "SEO juice," and do not create an overall quality issue. Google knows how to distinguish between useful pages and accessory pages on the same domain.
Why do so many SEOs still recommend noindex on these pages?
Out of excessive caution and confusion between various concepts. Many equate "low content" with "duplicate content" or "thin content" that incurs penalties. They apply a blanket rule indiscriminately: anything that adds no value must be deindexed.
This preventive approach starts from good intentions but lacks nuance. It assumes that Google cannot differentiate between industrial spam and legitimate but empty user profiles. However, the search engine has precisely evolved to handle these common situations on community platforms.
In what specific cases does noindex become truly necessary?
Two well-identified scenarios: organized spam and crawl budget issues. If spammers massively create fake profiles to inject spammy links or content, noindex protects the site. It’s a defensive measure against an attack, not a classic SEO optimization.
The second case involves sites with millions of profiles that saturate Googlebot's crawling capacity. If the bot spends 80% of its time on empty profiles instead of crawling new product or article pages, then yes, noindex frees up resources. But we’re talking about exceptional volumes — a forum with 50,000 members is not a concern.
- Empty profiles do not penalize the site as a whole.
- Google naturally filters pages that provide no added value for users.
- Noindex is relevant only in cases of massive spam or crawl budget saturation (millions of pages).
- This rule applies to community platforms, marketplaces, social networks, forums.
- Don’t panic if you have a few thousand incomplete profiles — focus on your strategic pages.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?
Overall yes, but with frustrating gray areas. Established community sites (Reddit, Stack Overflow, niche forums) massively index nearly empty profiles without any visible negative impact on their overall ranking. Their content pages continue to rank without a hitch.
Where it gets tricky: Google provides no specific numbers. "Millions of profiles" means how many exactly? 2 million? 10 million? And how exactly do you measure "preventing the crawling of priority pages"? [To be confirmed] with your own Search Console data — if your crawl rate on strategic pages drops while Googlebot is fixated on profiles, you have a problem.
What are the practical limits of this general rule?
First point: Mueller talks about "low-content profiles," not duplicate or template-spam profiles. If your 100,000 empty profiles all display exactly the same placeholder text ("This user has not completed their profile yet. Join us!"), you are creating massive duplicate content. That’s something Google dislikes.
Second limitation: semi-active profiles. A user who posted 3 messages 5 years ago and then nothing — is their profile empty or useful? If these profiles generate variable URL parameters (?sort=date, ?view=grid), you artificially multiply indexable pages. Here, noindex or canonical becomes relevant.
What to do if Google is indeed crawling too many useless profiles?
Before setting noindex everywhere, check the real stats. Search Console > Settings > Crawl Statistics. Look at how many requests Googlebot consumes on /profil/* versus /article/* or /produit/*. If the ratio is absurd (90% profiles, 10% content), take action.
There are several levers: robots.txt to completely block access (radical), conditional noindex ("if less than X characters of bio"), pagination with rel=next/prev or server-side lazy loading so that empty profiles don’t even generate crawlable URLs. Systematic noindex is the simplest option to implement, but not necessarily the most elegant.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to assess if your user profiles are really an issue?
First step: quantify the gap between indexed profiles and active profiles. Do a site:votredomaine.com/profil/ in Google. Compare this number to the number of users who have made at least one contribution (comment, article, review). If 80% of indexed profiles are empty, dig deeper.
Next, Search Console becomes your best ally. Crawl statistics section: analyze which URLs Googlebot visits the most. If /profil/user12345 appears among the top crawled pages while no one ever accesses it, you are wasting crawl budget. Cross-reference with Analytics data to identify profiles that actually generate organic traffic (spoiler: often close to zero).
What concrete actions to take based on volume and context?
For a site with fewer than 10,000 profiles: do nothing. Really. Focus your energy on your strategic pages. The time spent implementing conditional noindex on profiles will never be recouped with measurable SEO gains.
Between 10,000 and 500,000 profiles: implement a smart conditional noindex. If empty bio + no activity for 12 months + fewer than 3 contributions = noindex. Keep active or influential user profiles indexed. Implement via a server-side script that injects the meta robots according to business rules.
Beyond 500,000 profiles or if you detect a crawl budget saturation: aggressive noindex on all incomplete profiles, or even block robots.txt of the /profil/?page= patterns to avoid infinite pagination. Monitor the impact for 4-6 weeks. If your product/article pages are suddenly crawled 3x more often, you were right to act.
Errors to absolutely avoid in managing user profiles
Never set noindex on expert profiles or recurring authors whose contributions rank well. Some profiles generate organic traffic on queries like "review of [expert name] on [topic]" — check in Search Console before blocking everything.
Also be careful of cascading noindex. If you noindex profiles but leave indexed the pages /profil/user123/contributions that list their posts, you create inconsistencies. Google may index the child page but not the parent page, which generates broken navigation paths in the SERPs.
Finally, document the business logic. If in 6 months a new developer modifies the template and accidentally removes the noindex condition, you'll be back to square one. Comment the code, note the decision in your SEO documentation, and set up a monitoring alert to verify that the number of indexed /profil/ pages remains stable.
- Audit the ratio of indexed profiles / active profiles via site: and your databases.
- Analyze crawl stats in Search Console to identify wastage.
- Implement a conditional noindex based on business criteria (activity, completeness, age).
- Monitor the impact on the crawl of strategic pages for 4-6 weeks.
- Exclude expert/author profiles that generate organic traffic from noindex.
- Document the logic and set up monitoring to avoid regressions.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un profil utilisateur vide peut-il pénaliser mon site entier ?
À partir de combien de profils faut-il envisager le noindex ?
Le noindex sur les profils améliore-t-il le ranking des autres pages ?
Dois-je noindexer aussi les profils partiellement remplis ?
Comment savoir si mes profils consomment trop de crawl budget ?
🎥 From the same video 52
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 24/07/2020
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