Official statement
Other statements from this video 23 ▾
- 6:05 Pourquoi Google ne peut-il pas garantir une récupération rapide après une pénalité Penguin ?
- 13:05 Hreflang suffit-il vraiment à régler tous les problèmes de duplicate content international ?
- 13:09 Le contenu dupliqué entre TLD fait-il vraiment chuter votre classement ?
- 14:57 Les balises hreflang transmettent-elles du PageRank entre versions linguistiques ?
- 16:31 Pourquoi votre site ne récupère-t-il pas son trafic après la levée d'une pénalité manuelle ?
- 18:26 Les SVG sont-ils réellement indexés par Google comme du contenu textuel ?
- 18:57 Faut-il vraiment supprimer immédiatement les pages d'événements passés ?
- 20:01 Le HTTPS fait-il vraiment décoller vos positions dans Google ?
- 22:03 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il sur la cohérence des URL pour hreflang et canonical ?
- 22:06 Pourquoi la cohérence des URL détermine-t-elle ce que Google indexe vraiment ?
- 23:03 Le temps de chargement impacte-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 23:23 Les algorithmes de Google éliminent-ils vraiment tout le spam de votre site ?
- 36:07 Comment Google pénalise-t-il vraiment les pages au contenu faible ou dupliqué ?
- 38:04 Google Tag Manager améliore-t-il vraiment la vitesse de votre site pour le SEO ?
- 41:38 Le contenu dupliqué impacte-t-il vraiment le classement des images sur Google ?
- 45:28 Les pages multi-localisations tuent-elles vraiment votre SEO ?
- 48:29 Pourquoi est-il plus difficile de sortir d'une pénalité Penguin que d'une action manuelle ?
- 50:00 Faut-il vraiment bloquer les pages paginées de l'indexation Google ?
- 52:08 Faut-il vraiment bloquer l'indexation des pages paginées ?
- 56:48 Le contenu repris avec ajouts contextuels est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
- 58:09 Meta robots vs X-Robots-Tag : Google applique-t-il vraiment le même traitement aux deux ?
- 60:37 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer un 404 plutôt qu'une redirection vers la page d'accueil ?
- 70:03 Lever une sanction manuelle suffit-il à récupérer son trafic après Penguin ?
Google treats 301 redirects without a logical target as soft 404s, effectively canceling their impact. In practical terms, redirecting to the homepage or a generic category makes no technical sense and muddles the signals sent to crawlers. When a page disappears without a direct equivalent, a clean 404 remains the best response to avoid polluting the index and maintaining crawl budget consistency.
What you need to understand
Why does Google classify some 301 redirects as soft 404s?
A 301 redirect normally indicates a permanent move with thematic continuity: URL A becomes URL B, the content remains relevant for the user. When this logic disappears, Google sees the redirect as abusive or meaningless.
Typically, this happens when redirecting a missing product page to a generic category, or even worse, to the homepage. The crawler understands there is no content continuity, and treats the redirect as a soft 404 error: the URL is technically redirected, but Google interprets it as a disguised missing page.
What exactly is a soft 404?
A soft 404 is a page that returns a 200 code (success) but clearly indicates that it no longer exists. Google detects it through signals like the presence of mentions such as “product unavailable,” “page not found,” or nearly empty content.
In the case of a poorly targeted 301, the same mechanism activates: the destination page does not meet the initial intent, Google understands this and de-indexes the source URL without transferring value to the target. The result: wasted crawl time, confusion in Search Console reports, and no SEO benefit.
When does a clear 404 become preferable?
When there is no equivalent content on the site to replace the removed page, the 404 is the honest response. It explicitly informs Google that the resource no longer exists, allowing the engine to properly remove the URL from the index.
A well-managed 404 (with a customized page, navigation suggestions, an internal search engine) even enhances user experience. It also prevents dilution of internal PageRank by redirecting to generic pages that offer nothing to the user or the bot.
- 301 Redirects: reserved for cases of strict thematic continuity (replaced product, content merging, URL redesign).
- 404 Errors: mandatory when no equivalent page exists, to maintain index clarity.
- Soft 404s: to be avoided at all costs, they muddle signals and waste crawl budget without any benefit.
- Landing Pages: must always be relevant to the initial search intent; otherwise, Google ignores them.
- Search Console: monitor the coverage report to detect unintentional soft 404s and correct errant redirects.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it is one of the few statements from Mueller that perfectly aligns with the observed behaviors in production. Tests show that massively redirecting to the homepage or generic categories transfers no SEO juice and generates soft 404 alerts in Search Console.
What needs nuance is that Google does not instantly detect these empty redirects. It often takes several crawl passes for the soft 404 signal to activate. In the meantime, the URL can remain indexed with an incoherent target, creating artifacts in reports and skewing traffic analysis.
What common errors arise from a misunderstanding of this rule?
Many e-commerce sites automatically redirect out-of-stock product pages to the parent category, thinking they are “saving” SEO. In reality, this has the opposite effect: no PageRank transfer, pollution of the index with ghost URLs, and degradation of crawl budget.
Another common mistake: systematically redirecting old URLs to the new structure during a redesign, even when the content has completely disappeared. If the old article “Guide 2018” has no equivalent, a 404 is better than a redirect to a generic 2023 guide that covers a different topic. [To verify]: Google has never published a precise threshold for defining a “logical target,” leaving a gray area on categorical redirects.
When does this rule not apply completely?
There are situations where a redirect to a generic page remains defensible, especially for business or UX reasons. For example, a media site archiving its old content might redirect to a thematic archive page rather than display a raw 404.
However, even in this case, the destination page must provide real value to the user: a list of related articles, an internal search engine, personalized suggestions. Otherwise, Google will eventually treat it as a soft 404 anyway.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do when removing content?
First, audit the relevance of each URL before removal. Ask yourself: is there equivalent content on the site that meets the same search intent? If yes, redirect with 301. If not, own the 404.
Next, customize your 404 page to keep it useful: category navigation suggestions, an internal search engine, links to popular content. A good 404 page reduces bounce rate and improves behavioral signals, even if the initial URL disappears from the index.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided in redirect management?
Never massively redirect to the homepage or a handful of generic pages. This creates a spam pattern that Google easily detects, diluting internal linking without offering anything to the user.
Avoid redirect chains (A→B→C), especially if the last target is of little relevance. Google follows up to 5 hops, but in practice, each additional hop reduces value transfer and increases the risk of soft 404 errors.
How can you check if your site adheres to this logic?
In Search Console, monitor the “Coverage” tab and filter for “Excluded – Soft 404.” If URLs appear there while you have set up 301 redirects, it's a sign that Google does not find the target relevant.
Also run a crawl with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl to identify redirects to generic pages. Any repetitive pattern (e.g., 50 product pages → same category) should be manually corrected with 404s or more precise targets.
- Audit each removal: is equivalent content available or not?
- Redirect only to pages with strong thematic continuity.
- Customize the 404 page with useful navigation and an internal search engine.
- Monitor Search Console for unexpected soft 404s.
- Avoid redirect chains and mass patterns to the homepage.
- Regularly crawl the site to identify redirects to generic pages.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une redirection 301 vers une catégorie parente est-elle toujours considérée comme soft 404 ?
Combien de temps Google met-il pour détecter une soft 404 après une redirection ?
Peut-on récupérer le PageRank d'une URL en 404 en la réactivant plus tard ?
Faut-il garder les 404 en place indéfiniment ou peut-on les supprimer complètement ?
Les redirections 302 sont-elles traitées différemment des 301 dans ce contexte ?
🎥 From the same video 23
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h02 · published on 19/06/2015
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