Official statement
Other statements from this video 8 ▾
- 9:01 Les +1 de Google influencent-ils vraiment le classement dans les résultats de recherche ?
- 11:45 Faut-il encore miser sur les applications natives ou privilégier le web mobile pour le SEO ?
- 14:21 Acheter de la pub Google améliore-t-il vraiment votre SEO ?
- 19:03 Panda évolue en continu : comment Google affine-t-il vraiment la détection de qualité ?
- 22:05 Le ping de contenu accélère-t-il vraiment l'indexation et protège-t-il du duplicate content ?
- 25:42 Trop d'URL sur un site nuit-il vraiment au référencement ?
- 27:36 La balise rel=author peut-elle vraiment booster votre crédibilité dans les SERP ?
- 27:59 Faut-il encore utiliser rel=author pour améliorer son SEO ?
Google recognizes that the rel=prev, rel=next, and rel=canonical tags give publishers direct control over how pagination is handled. This statement validates the use of these attributes to consolidate SEO signals from fragmented content. The practical benefit: avoid dilution of PageRank and simplify the indexing of paginated pages without sacrificing user experience.
What you need to understand
Why did Google introduce these pagination tags?
The fragmentation of long content presents a structural issue for search engines. An article split into 5 pages generates 5 distinct URLs, each with its own crawl budget, ranking signals, and potentially a dilution of PageRank. Google needs to identify which page represents the main content and how to handle the segments.
The rel=prev and rel=next tags explicitly declare the sequential relationships between pages of a paginated series. The rel=canonical tag, on the other hand, allows for consolidating signals towards a reference URL. These attributes empower publishers to guide Googlebot instead of leaving it to guess.
What’s the practical difference between rel=canonical and rel=prev/next?
The rel=canonical indicates that a URL is the reference version of duplicate or similar content. In the context of pagination, pointing all paginated pages to page 1 via canonical means: "this page is the main version, index it first."
The rel=prev/next tags work differently. They signal to Google that a series of pages forms a cohesive set without designating a single canonical version. Googlebot can then choose to index multiple pages of the series or consolidate signals according to its internal algorithm. This is less directive than canonical.
What impact does Google suggest this has on user experience?
The statement mentions "simplifying user experience", which is a misleading formulation. Rel tags have no direct effect on client-side UX — they are invisible to the visitor. Google refers to the fact that these tags allow publishers to serve paginated content without fearing chaotic SEO treatment.
Practically, a publisher can break a long guide into short pages to reduce loading time and improve navigation while maintaining SEO coherence through the tags. Without these attributes, pagination becomes a painful SEO/UX arbitration.
- Rel=canonical consolidates all signals towards a single URL (usually page 1)
- Rel=prev/next declares sequential relationships without imposing a reference page
- Both approaches can coexist depending on the chosen content strategy
- The use of these tags avoids perceived duplication by Googlebot on fragmented content
- The choice between strict canonical and prev/next depends on the goal: concentrate PageRank or index multiple segments
SEO Expert opinion
Is this approach still relevant with changes in Googlebot?
Cutts' statement comes from a time when Googlebot struggled more with handling pagination autonomously. Since then, the algorithm has improved, and Google even deprecated the support of rel=next/prev in 2019. [To be verified]: officially, these tags are no longer used by Google as pagination signals, even if they don't cause errors.
The rel=canonical remains entirely valid and used. The real current advice would be to favor a "view-all" page or infinite scrolling with fragment pagination, rather than relying on rel=prev/next. Thus, the original statement is partially outdated concerning prev/next.
What contradictions are observed in practice?
Multiple audits show that Google sometimes indexes pages 2, 3, 4 of a paginated series even with a strict canonical to page 1. The engine seems to ignore the canonical when it judges that the subsequent pages contain sufficiently different unique content. This is consistent with the philosophy "we treat canonical as a suggestion, not a directive".
Another observation: paginated pages without any rel tags rarely generate duplication issues if the displayed content significantly changes from one page to another. Google has learned to recognize pagination patterns by URL (page=2, p=3, etc.) without explicit help. Rel tags remain useful for complex cases or for forcing specific behavior.
In what cases are these tags still essential?
On massive e-commerce catalogs with thousands of paginated product pages, using rel=canonical toward a "view-all" page or page 1 avoids wasting crawl budget. Without a clear directive, Googlebot may crawl 50 pagination pages instead of focusing on product listings.
For long editorial content divided into chapters, the optimal current approach is to offer a "full article" version as canonical and leave the segmented pages accessible without rel tags. This allows rushed users to navigate by fragment while not losing concentrated SEO juice on the main URL.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be implemented on a website with pagination?
The first step: audit all paginated series using Screaming Frog or similar crawler. Identify URL patterns (?page=, /page/2/, etc.) and check for the presence or absence of rel tags. A site without a clear pagination strategy leaves Google to decide on its own, which can lead to indexing inconsistencies.
Next, choose between three architectures: (1) canonical to page 1 to concentrate signals, (2) canonical to a view-all page if it exists and loads quickly, (3) no rel tag if each paginated page has sufficiently distinct content to warrant standalone indexing. There is no universal answer; it all depends on the type of content and volume.
What technical errors should be addressed immediately?
The most common error: a canonical pointing to a nonexistent page or a 404. This entirely negates the effect of the canonical and creates a contradictory signal for Googlebot. Another trap: a canonical on page 2 pointing to page 1, but page 1 has a canonical to another URL. This canonical chaining is problematic.
Be wary of sorting or filtering parameters mixed with pagination. A URL like /products?page=2&sort=price generates explosive combinations. Use rel=canonical to consolidate these variations or block them via robots.txt if they hold no SEO value.
How can you validate that Google is respecting your guidelines?
Use Google Search Console to check which pages of your paginated series are indexed. If you've set a strict canonical to page 1 but page 3 and 5 appear in the index, it means Google has decided to treat them as alternative canonicals. This isn't necessarily an error, but it warrants investigation.
Also test the crawl budget: a site wasting 40% of its budget on unnecessary pagination pages has a structural issue. Server logs reveal these patterns. If Googlebot spends more time on /page/47/ than on your strategic content, the pagination architecture needs revision.
- Audit all paginated series and document URL patterns
- Choose a consistent canonical strategy (page 1, view-all, or none)
- Remove canonical chaining and canonicals pointing to 404s
- Isolate pagination parameters from filtering/sorting parameters
- Check actual indexing through Search Console and compare with intent
- Analyze logs to detect crawl budget waste on pagination
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je encore utiliser rel=prev et rel=next en 2025 ?
Quelle différence entre canonical vers page 1 et canonical vers view-all ?
Que se passe-t-il si je n'utilise aucune balise rel sur mes pages paginées ?
Les pages 2, 3, 4 peuvent-elles se positionner dans les résultats Google ?
Comment gérer la pagination sur un site e-commerce avec filtres et tri ?
🎥 From the same video 8
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 45 min · published on 22/09/2011
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