Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- □ Google réécrit-il vraiment vos balises title à sa guise ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment bannir les prix et stocks des balises title ?
- □ Comment vérifier efficacement l'affichage réel de vos title links dans les SERP Google ?
- □ Pourquoi Google impose-t-il un seuil de 1200 pixels pour les images produits ?
- □ Les données structurées sont-elles vraiment indispensables pour éviter de passer à côté des rich snippets ?
- □ Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il sur 6 champs minimaux dans les données structurées produits ?
- □ Pourquoi vos rich snippets n'apparaissent-ils pas malgré un balisage Schema.org en place ?
- □ Faut-il vraiment combiner données structurées et flux Merchant Center pour le SEO produit ?
- □ Comment Google calcule-t-il réellement les baisses de prix affichées dans les résultats enrichis ?
- □ Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il les fourchettes de prix dans les données structurées produit ?
- □ Pourquoi Google n'affiche-t-il pas toutes les baisses de prix que vous balisez ?
- □ Les GTIN boostent-ils vraiment l'exposition produit sur Google ?
- □ Google Business Profile : pourquoi les entreprises 100% en ligne sont-elles exclues ?
- □ Les données structurées et Merchant Center sont-elles vraiment la stratégie SEO la plus rentable sur le long terme ?
Google confirms that the robots Max Image Preview tag allows you to dictate the maximum size of image previews displayed in search results. This directive is part of the often-overlooked robots parameters, yet it offers direct control over how your visuals appear to users. Strategic configuration can improve CTR or protect certain premium content.
What you need to understand
What exactly is the Max Image Preview tag and how does it work?
The Max Image Preview tag is a robots directive that tells Google the maximum size allowed for image previews in search results. It accepts three values: none (no preview), standard (default thumbnail) and large (large preview, potentially full-width).
Unlike standard robots tags that control indexing, this one acts on the visual presentation of your content. It's placed in the meta section of your pages or via the X-Robots-Tag HTTP header.
Why does Google offer publishers this level of control?
Google aims to balance user experience with publishers' interests. Large previews can boost engagement in SERPs — especially for recipes, visual tutorials or illustrated editorial content. But some publishers prefer limiting the display to encourage clicks through to their site.
This directive also addresses editorial concerns: a paywall-protected media outlet may want to hide premium images, while an e-commerce site can prioritize generous previews to maximize product visibility.
What are the concrete use cases for this tag?
- Premium content: Block previews to protect exclusive visuals (fashion, photojournalism, paid infographics)
- E-commerce: Allow large previews to maximize the appeal of product sheets in Google Images
- Editorial SEO: Test the impact of previews on CTR — a large visual can catch the eye, but may also reduce the need to click
- Legal compliance: Restrict the display of sensitive images or those subject to distribution restrictions
SEO Expert opinion
Is this directive actually respected by Google?
On this point, the answer is yes — at least for the none and standard values. Field observations confirm that Google generally respects these directives, unlike some newer robots tags whose application remains unclear. [To verify]: The exact impact of the large value on CTR remains difficult to measure, as Google also adjusts preview size based on query context.
Let's be honest: this tag isn't a magic bullet. If your image is poorly optimized, lacks context, or your overall content is weak, authorizing a large preview won't change anything. It's a complementary lever, not a standalone solution.
Should you always opt for the large value?
No. The "bigger is better" logic doesn't apply here. Some sites — particularly paywall-protected media or platforms with exclusive content — have good reason to limit previews to force clicks. Others will find that a generous preview boosts CTR by creating a visual attraction effect.
The problem is there are no consolidated public datasets to settle the debate. Google publishes no statistics on CTR impact according to the value chosen. So you need to test — and that's where it gets tricky for many sites lacking analytical resources.
What are the limitations of this approach?
Another caveat: even with max-image-preview:large, Google may choose to show only a thumbnail if the algorithm deems that format more relevant for the query. You're giving an authorization, not an order.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely on your site?
First step: audit your strategic pages. Identify those where images play a key role in conversion (product sheets, illustrated articles, landing pages). Check if a Max Image Preview directive is already in place — and whether it matches your editorial strategy.
To implement the tag, you have two options: either via a meta tag in the <head> of your pages, or via the X-Robots-Tag HTTP header. The first is easier to manage for most CMSs, the second is useful for non-HTML files (PDFs, standalone images).
What mistakes should you avoid when implementing?
- Don't confuse this tag with max-snippet or max-video-preview — they're complementary but distinct
- Avoid systematically blocking all previews (none) without strategic reason — you're losing visibility for nothing
- Don't forget to test the implementation with the URL Inspection tool in Search Console
- Verify that the directive doesn't conflict with a
noindexordisallowin your robots.txt - Don't neglect the technical optimization of images themselves (weight, WebP format, alt attributes)
How do you measure the impact of this optimization?
Compare CTR before/after the change in Search Console, segmenting by page type. Also monitor impressions in Google Images if that channel is strategic for you. Note: the effect may take several weeks to stabilize, while Google recrawls and reindexes your pages.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
La balise Max Image Preview fonctionne-t-elle aussi pour Bing et les autres moteurs ?
Puis-je définir une valeur différente selon les pages de mon site ?
Est-ce que cette balise impacte le référencement de mes images dans Google Images ?
Quelle est la syntaxe exacte pour implémenter cette balise ?
Que se passe-t-il si je ne définis aucune directive Max Image Preview ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 28/07/2022
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