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Official statement

Google considers links pointing to a web page as well as the anchor text in these links for SEO and page ranking.
1:04
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 53:32 💬 EN 📅 23/02/2016 ✂ 13 statements
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📅
Official statement from (10 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that backlinks and their anchor text still play a role in SEO. John Mueller's statement reminds us of a fundamental aspect of PageRank that has often been overlooked since Penguin: clickable text conveys semantic context to the engine. Practically, this means optimizing anchors remains a valid tactic, but the nuance lies in dosage and diversity.

What you need to understand

Why is Google emphasizing this fundamental element now?

This statement is not revolutionary. The original PageRank was already based on two pillars: the link graph and anchor text as a contextual signal. But with Penguin (2012) and subsequent anti-spam filters, many practitioners developed a form of paranoia around optimized anchors.

Mueller sets the record straight. Links and their anchors still matter, but in a more mature ecosystem where Google distinguishes between gross manipulation and natural signals. The context of a link remains a relevance factor, not an automatic penalty vector if the use is legitimate.

Is anchor text still as powerful as before Penguin?

The short answer: no. The relative weight has decreased compared to other signals (RankBrain, BERT, user intent, behavioral signals). Google now has advanced semantic understanding that no longer relies solely on clickable text to contextualize a target page.

But this doesn't mean the anchor has become irrelevant. It acts as a confirmation signal: if the content of the page, the context of the link, and the anchor converge, the engine gains confidence. Conversely, a glaring mismatch (hyper-commercial anchor on a natural editorial link) can dilute the impact, or even raise a red flag.

How does Google handle anchors in practice?

The algorithm analyzes the diversity and consistency of anchor profiles at the site level. A healthy site displays a natural mix: brand, bare URL, generic anchors ("learn more", "here"), and some relevant descriptive anchors. A manipulated site shows an abnormal concentration of exact commercial anchors.

Google also weighs the anchor based on the quality and theme of the source site. An optimized anchor from an authoritative site in the same niche carries more weight than an identical anchor from a general directory. The context of the paragraph surrounding the link also plays a role: if the text before/after the anchor reinforces the topic, the signal is amplified.

  • Links still count as a ranking signal, despite the evolution of semantic algorithms.
  • Anchor text conveys thematic context, but its relative weight has decreased compared to other factors.
  • Google analyzes the diversity and consistency of anchor profiles to detect manipulation.
  • The editorial context of the link (surrounding paragraph, relevance of the source site) modulates the anchor's impact.
  • Over-optimized concentrated anchors remain a potential spam signal.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, overall. The tests I have conducted in competitive niches (fintech, health, real estate) show that well-placed descriptive anchors still accelerate ranking on specific queries. But the effect is conditional: it requires a quality source site, a credible editorial context, and above all, a diversity of anchors across the overall profile.

What has changed is the risk tolerance. Previously, one could force 60% exact match anchors and rank quickly. Today, a ratio exceeding 15-20% of optimized commercial anchors raises alarms if the rest of the profile lacks naturalness. [To be verified]: Google has never disclosed official thresholds, but observations converge on these orders of magnitude.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller does not mention the dilution filters that apply to spammy anchors. A link with an over-optimized anchor from a low-quality site likely conveys no weight and may even dilute the overall trust of the profile. Google does not systematically penalize, but it ignores or massively devalues.

Another nuance: the anchor is just one variable among dozens in the link equation. Placement on the page (editorial body vs footer), presence of other outgoing links, actual traffic generated, click-through rate, freshness of the source content... all of this modulates the final impact. A perfect link with a generic anchor can outperform a mediocre link with an optimized anchor.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

For YMYL queries (Your Money Your Life), Google weighs domain authority and editorial credibility more heavily. Anchor text takes a backseat to the reputation of the source. A link from a governmental or university site with a neutral anchor will often outperform a thematic blog link with an optimized anchor.

Established brand sites also benefit from a different logic. If you are Amazon, most of your backlinks naturally contain your name or URL. Google does not expect artificial diversity. Conversely, a young site with 80% brand anchors without real reputation may appear suspicious.

Caution: this statement does not mean to relaunch optimized anchor campaigns. The risk of triggering a manual or algorithmic filter remains high if the profile lacks editorial coherence. Always prioritize the quality of the source site and the editorial context over the optimization of the anchor itself.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do with this information?

The first step: audit your current anchor profile. Use Ahrefs, Majestic, or SEMrush to extract the distribution of your anchors. If you exceed 20% of exact match commercial anchors, it’s a warning sign. Gradually rebalance by prioritizing brand anchors, bare URLs, and generics in your next acquisitions.

Next, contextualize each link you obtain. A link from an editorial article where the anchor fits naturally into a descriptive sentence is worth more than ten footer links with forced anchors. Work with writers to ensure the anchor logically flows from the surrounding content, not the other way around.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Don't fall into the trap of mechanical optimization. Some SEOs still apply fixed ratios (10% exact match, 30% partial, 60% diverse) like a magic recipe. Google does not operate with binary thresholds. What matters is the narrative coherence: your anchor profile should tell a credible story of editorial growth.

Another classic mistake: neglecting anchors on internal links. Google also uses these signals to understand the semantic architecture of your site. Descriptive anchors in your internal linking help the engine map your thematic hierarchy, especially on deep sites with thousands of pages.

How can you check that your anchor profile is healthy?

Compare your profile to that of established competitors in your niche. Look at the distribution of their anchors: if the leaders have 70% brand and generic anchors, and you have 40% commercial anchors, you are out of norm. Benchmarking remains the best safeguard against deviations.

Also watch the speed of acquisition. A sudden spike in backlinks with similar anchors (even if relevant) looks like an artificial campaign. Google prefers linear growth with anchors that evolve naturally over time, reflecting the site's editorial maturation.

  • Extract and analyze the current distribution of your anchors using an SEO tool
  • Gradually rebalance if commercial anchors exceed 15-20%
  • Prioritize the editorial context and quality of the source site over anchor optimization
  • Benchmark your anchor profile against that of established competitors in your niche
  • Also optimize the anchors of your internal linking to strengthen semantic architecture
  • Monitor acquisition speed to avoid suspicious spikes of similar links
Links and their anchors remain an active ranking lever, but their management now requires an editorial finesse that few sites master alone. Between analyzing the existing profile, gradual rebalancing, competitive benchmarking, and coordinating with a coherent content strategy, anchor optimization is an artisan's work. If your site operates in a competitive niche or if your current profile shows warning signs, the support of a specialized SEO agency can be decisive in securing your growth without triggering any filters.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les ancres exact match sont-elles encore efficaces ou dangereuses ?
Elles restent efficaces si elles représentent une minorité naturelle du profil (moins de 15-20 %) et proviennent de sources éditoriales crédibles. Concentrées ou issues de sites faibles, elles deviennent un signal de spam.
Dois-je privilégier les ancres marque ou les ancres descriptives ?
Les deux, selon le contexte. Les ancres marque renforcent la notoriété et paraissent naturelles. Les ancres descriptives apportent du contexte sémantique utile si elles s'intègrent logiquement dans un contenu éditorial de qualité.
Google pénalise-t-il automatiquement un profil d'ancres sur-optimisé ?
Pas systématiquement. Google dévalue d'abord les liens suspects sans impact visible, puis applique un filtre algorithmique si la manipulation est flagrante. Les pénalités manuelles restent réservées aux abus massifs.
Les ancres des liens internes ont-elles autant d'importance que celles des backlinks ?
Moins d'impact direct sur l'autorité, mais elles jouent un rôle clé dans la compréhension de l'architecture sémantique du site. Des ancres descriptives cohérentes aident Google à mapper ta hiérarchie thématique.
Comment rattraper un profil d'ancres déséquilibré sans désavouer massivement ?
Dilue progressivement en acquérant de nouveaux liens avec des ancres variées et naturelles. Le désaveu n'est utile que si des liens toxiques identifiés nuisent activement. La croissance saine rééquilibre mieux qu'un nettoyage brutal.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content AI & SEO Links & Backlinks

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