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Official statement

Google uses image alt texts as an integral part of a page's content. The relevance of alt texts can help with the page's ranking.
19:42
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 45:25 💬 EN 📅 09/03/2017 ✂ 21 statements
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📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that image alt texts are treated as full content and can affect a page's overall ranking. A relevant alt text is not only beneficial for image SEO; it enriches the semantics of the page and enhances its thematic relevance. For SEO, this is an often-underutilized opportunity for context injection.

What you need to understand

Why does Google consider alt texts as integral content?

Alt texts are not just secondary metadata. Google reads and interprets them just like a regular text paragraph. This means they contribute to the overall semantic understanding of the page.

Contrary to popular belief, alt text is not limited to image SEO in Google Images. It actively contributes to the relevance score of the page itself for its target queries. A page without images or with empty alt texts loses a lever for thematic strengthening.

What’s the difference between an optimized alt text and a keyword-stuffed alt text?

Relevance is the key word. An optimized alt text accurately describes the image while naturally incorporating the page's semantic vocabulary. It enriches the context without forcing it.

A keyword-stuffed alt text, on the other hand, resembles spam. Google can detect artificial repetitions and lists of terms unrelated to the image. The risk? Diluting relevance instead of enhancing it, or even triggering a over-optimization signal.

How does Google measure the relevance of alt texts?

Google cross-references the alt text with the visual context of the image (through its computer vision models), the surrounding textual content, and the semantic coherence of the page. A coherent alt text with these signals reinforces algorithmic trust.

If the alt text describes an infographic about backlinks but the image shows a traffic graph, Google detects the inconsistency. Algorithmic relevance relies on the alignment between descriptive text, visual content, and page theme.

  • Alt texts are read like regular text and contribute to the page's semantic scoring.
  • Relevance outweighs density: a natural and descriptive alt text always outperforms a list of keywords.
  • Google cross-references alt text with actual visual content through its image recognition models.
  • An empty alt text = a lost context opportunity, but a spammy alt text can be detrimental.
  • Alt texts strengthen thematic coherence and help Google better grasp the page's intent.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and it's one of the rare claims from Google that aligns perfectly with ground tests. Pages with semantically rich alt texts perform better on competitive queries, especially in verticals where images add contextual value (e-commerce, technical guides, illustrated editorial content).

We regularly see gains in rankings on transactional queries after optimizing alt texts, especially when images reinforce intent (e.g., "comparison", "before-after", "step-by-step tutorial"). It’s not a miracle lever, but its impact is measurable when integrated into a comprehensive semantic optimization.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Google states that alt texts "can" help with ranking, not that they always do. The real weight depends on the page's context and the type of query. For broad informational queries, the impact will be minimal. For queries with strong visual intent, the effect will be significant.

Another nuance: an optimized alt text will never compensate for weak textual content. If the body text is superficial, adding rich alt texts won’t work miracles. Alt texts are relevance amplifiers, not crutches. [To verify]: Google does not specify whether all types of images (decorative, structural, editorial) receive the same algorithmic treatment.

In which cases does this rule not fully apply?

Purely decorative images (UI icons, graphic separators, design elements) are not meant to carry semantic meaning. Assigning them keyword-heavy alt texts would be counterproductive. Better to use an empty alt (alt="") than a forced alt.

Highly technical pages (SaaS, developer documentation) where images are screenshots of interfaces will see a limited impact. The alt text should remain descriptive ("CMS admin interface") without trying to artificially include keywords. The surrounding textual context already carries most of the semantic signal.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do on your existing pages?

Conduct an alt text audit on your strategic pages. Identify those without alt texts, those with generic alts ("image1.jpg", "photo"), and those with overloaded alts. Prioritize pages ranking in positions 4-15: that’s where optimizing alt texts can trigger a visibility jump.

For each editorial image, write an alt of 8-15 words that accurately describes the image while naturally incorporating the semantic vocabulary of the target query. Example: instead of "graph", use "evolution of organic traffic over 12 months after SEO overhaul". The description should provide context, not just name the object.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Never duplicate the same alt text across multiple images on the same page. Google interprets this as internal duplicate content and dilutes the signal. Each image should have a unique alt that reflects its specificity.

Avoid lists of keywords separated by commas ("SEO, natural referencing, Google optimization, content strategy"). It's detectable spam. Construct natural sentences that would read well aloud. If a visually impaired person wouldn't understand your alt, Google won't either.

How can you check that your alt texts are exploitable by Google?

Use Screaming Frog or a similar crawler to extract all the alt texts from your site. Export them into a spreadsheet and analyze their semantic coherence with the page titles and corresponding H1s. Empty or generic fields will stand out.

Test the voice reading of your pages (browser extensions like Screen Reader). If the flow of text + alt texts sounds artificial or repetitive, your optimization is too aggressive. The semantic fluidity must remain natural. A good alt text enriches understanding without disrupting reading flow.

  • Audit strategic pages (top 20 by traffic) to identify missing or generic alts.
  • Write descriptive alts of 8-15 words incorporating the semantic vocabulary of the target query.
  • Check the uniqueness of alt texts within the same page (no duplication).
  • Avoid keyword lists: prioritize natural and readable sentences.
  • Test semantic coherence between alt texts, surrounding textual content, and H1/title.
  • Use alt="" for purely decorative images (do not force keywords).
Optimizing alt texts is about finding a delicate balance between semantic relevance, precise description, and natural integration. On large sites or complex product catalogs, managing this coherence at scale can quickly become time-consuming and technical. If you want to leverage this aspect without risking over-optimization or wasting time, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help automate these optimizations intelligently while maintaining a quality editorial approach. Expert support will save you execution speed and enhance semantic analysis finesse.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un alt text vide pénalise-t-il le référencement d'une page ?
Non, un alt vide (alt="") n'est pas pénalisant en soi, surtout pour les images décoratives. En revanche, une image éditoriale sans alt représente une opportunité perdue de renforcer la pertinence sémantique de la page.
Faut-il mettre des mots-clés dans tous les alt texts d'une page ?
Non, absolument pas. L'alt text doit décrire l'image de manière naturelle. Forcer des mots-clés dans chaque alt text génère un signal de suroptimisation détectable par Google.
Les alt texts influencent-ils uniquement le référencement dans Google Images ?
Non, c'est une idée reçue. Google utilise les alt texts comme contenu textuel intégré à la page, ce qui impacte son classement global dans la recherche web classique, pas seulement dans Images.
Quelle longueur optimale pour un alt text efficace ?
Entre 8 et 15 mots en moyenne. Assez court pour rester naturel, assez long pour apporter du contexte sémantique. Évite les descriptions-fleuves de 30+ mots qui diluent le signal.
Google peut-il détecter si un alt text ne correspond pas à l'image ?
Oui, grâce à ses modèles de vision par ordinateur. Si l'alt text décrit quelque chose qui ne correspond pas au contenu visuel réel, Google détecte l'incohérence et peut ignorer ou dévaloriser le signal.
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