Official statement
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Disavowing backlinks can help lift a manual penalty related to artificial links, but it may not necessarily improve your ranking. If your positioning relied on these disavowed links, you may even drop in ranking. Google acknowledges that the disavow tool is primarily corrective, not an optimization tactic.
What you need to understand
What is the real role of the disavow file according to Google?
Google presents the disavow tool as a corrective measure against manual actions, not as a performance booster. When a site receives a manual penalty for unnatural links, disavowing toxic backlinks becomes necessary to lift this sanction.
However, Mueller insists: this process guarantees no rise in search results. If your site relied on these artificial links to rank, disavowing them means losing what artificially supported your visibility. The statement confirms that Google clearly distinguishes between penalty removal and ranking improvement — two separate issues.
Why does Google specify that improvement is not guaranteed?
This nuance reveals the underlying algorithmic logic. Disavowed links cease to pass SEO juice, whether positive or negative. If these backlinks were spam but ignored by the algorithm, their disavowal changes nothing — they were already not influencing your score.
Conversely, if these links actively contributed to your domain authority (even artificially), disavowing them is like cutting off the branch you were sitting on. Google implicitly acknowledges that its algorithm can value links it later deems "unnatural" during a manual review. This contradiction between automatic processing and human assessment explains why some sites drop after disavowal.
When should this tool really be used?
The disavow.txt file is required in two specific scenarios. First case: you have received a manual penalty notification in Search Console for "artificial links." Without disavowing the incriminated URLs, it is impossible to request a re-examination and lift the sanction.
Second, rarer case: your link profile shows an abnormal concentration of toxic backlinks (over-optimized anchors, link farms, detectable PBNs) and you anticipate an imminent manual action. Here, disavowal becomes preventive. But be careful — outside these documented situations, touching the disavow file often stems from paranoia more than strategy.
- Disavowal does not boost rankings: it lifts a manual sanction, period.
- Disavowing links that supported your ranking may cause a drop in SERPs.
- The tool is relevant only in the face of a proven manual action or a clearly toxic link profile.
- Google admits the gap between its algorithmic processing and manual evaluations of links.
- The disavow.txt file acts as a signal for Google to ignore certain backlinks — it does not physically remove them.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with on-the-ground observations?
On paper, Mueller's position seems clear. In reality, hundreds of documented cases show flagrant inconsistencies. Sites have seen their organic traffic plummet after massively disavowing links deemed toxic by third-party tools — without ever receiving a manual penalty.
Conversely, some heavily penalized sites have regained their visibility after disavowal, achieving positions higher than their pre-penalty status. This variability suggests that Google's algorithm treats links more complexly than this official statement implies. [To be verified]: the actual impact of disavowal on ranking signals beyond mere penalty removal remains opaque.
What dangerous unspoken truths are present in this communication?
Mueller omits a critical point: the disavow tool does not distinguish between toxic links and mediocre links. Many SEOs disavow weak backlinks (blog comments, low-quality directories) out of caution that have never influenced their ranking — neither positively nor negatively.
The result: a waste of time for no effect. Even more problematic, Google provides no objective criteria to identify "unnatural" links before a manual action. Tools like Ahrefs or Semrush use their own metrics (DR, spam score) that do not necessarily reflect Google's view. This ambiguity leads some practitioners to disavow out of excessive caution, with sometimes disastrous consequences.
Can we really trust the algorithm to ignore spam?
Google has been stating for years that its algorithm knows how to automatically ignore spam links, making disavowal unnecessary in the majority of cases. If this were true, why does the tool still exist? Why do manual penalties target link profiles that the algorithm should have neutralized on its own?
The answer comes down to one word: imperfection. The algorithm misses certain manipulations, sometimes overestimates artificial signals, and underestimates legitimate links. Manual actions serve as a safety net when AI goes awry. However, publicly admitting this limitation would undermine trust in the system. Thus, Mueller's statement remains superficial, failing to address these grey areas where practitioners and the algorithm diverge on the "naturalness" of a link.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can I determine if I really need to disavow links?
First rule: only touch the disavow.txt file if you have received a manual notification in Google Search Console. Without documented manual action, the risk of harm far outweighs the potential benefit. Check the "Manual actions" tab — if it shows "No issues detected," leave the tool alone.
If you have an active penalty, audit your backlink profile using Search Console, Ahrefs, and Majestic. Target obvious patterns: repetitive commercial anchors, mass low-quality sites, detectable link networks. Only disavow what is manifestly artificial — not weak links or generic anchors that pose no issue.
What methodology should be applied for effective disavowal?
Start by exporting your complete link profile from Search Console and at least two third-party tools. Cross-reference data to identify backlinks present in multiple sources — a sign that they are genuinely crawled. Classify them by quality metric (DR, TF, spam score) but especially by topical consistency and context.
A link from a poker site to your plumbing site? Suspicious. A link from a general directory from 2008 with 500 outgoing links? Unwanted but rarely toxic. Prefer disavowal at the domain level (domain:example.com) for link farms, and at the URL level for isolated problematic backlinks. Test your file over a period of 4 to 6 weeks before assessing the impact — Google takes time to reprocess these signals.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided during a disavowal?
Classic mistake: disavowing entire quality domains because a tool assigns them a high "spam score." These third-party metrics do not reflect Google's view — a site can have a low DR while still being legitimate. Never disavow a recognized authoritative domain (press, institutions, .edu, .gov) unless there is irrefutable evidence of manipulation.
Another pitfall: submitting a disavow.txt file without documenting your approach. Before any upload, export your current profile, capture your positions on key queries, note your organic traffic. If the disavowal goes wrong, you can annul it by resubmitting an empty file — but without a baseline, it's impossible to measure the real impact. Finally, avoid disavowing and then requesting a re-examination immediately after — wait for Google to process your profile, which can take several weeks.
- Check the "Manual actions" tab in Search Console before taking any steps.
- Audit backlinks via at least two sources (Search Console + third-party tool).
- Only disavow pattern links that are manifestly artificial, not harmless weak links.
- Prefer disavowal at the domain level for link networks, and URL level for isolated cases.
- Document the initial state (positions, traffic, link profile) before submitting the file.
- Wait 4 to 6 weeks before assessing the impact and possibly adjusting.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le fichier de désaveu peut-il améliorer mon classement sans action manuelle ?
Comment savoir si mes liens sont considérés comme non naturels par Google ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour voir l'effet d'un désaveu de liens ?
Peut-on annuler un désaveu de liens si on constate une baisse de trafic ?
Faut-il désavouer des liens provenant de sites de faible autorité ?
🎥 From the same video 21
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 19/02/2019
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