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Official statement

With the URL inspection tool in Search Console, you can check which URL Google has selected as canonical. If it’s not the desired page, search for and correct the signals pointing to the old URL.
1:39
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1:39 💬 EN 📅 22/04/2020 ✂ 3 statements
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Other statements from this video 2
  1. 0:36 Les redirections 301 suffisent-elles vraiment à imposer votre canonique à Google ?
  2. 1:07 Faut-il vraiment nettoyer tous les liens internes après une redirection 301 ?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that the URL inspection tool in Search Console allows you to verify which page has been selected as canonical. If it's not the one you want, you need to identify and correct the conflicting signals that are leading Google to the wrong URL. Specifically, this tool diagnoses the problem — but it's up to you to untangle why Google is ignoring your directives.

What you need to understand

Why doesn't Google always respect your canonical tag?

Canonicalization relies on a system of multiple signals, not just a single directive. Your rel="canonical" tag is merely a recommendation among many — Google weighs it against 301 redirects, URLs in the XML sitemap, internal links, and even external backlinks.

When these signals conflict, the algorithm makes a choice. And that choice isn't always what you expect. The inspection tool reveals this canonical URL selected by Google, which is often different from the one declared server-side.

How does the inspection tool work to diagnose canonicalization?

In Search Console, type in the URL you think is canonical. The tool immediately displays which version Google has indexed and why it made this choice — or at least, it lists the detected signals.

You will see: the user-declared canonical URL, the one detected by Google, and the reasons for divergence. Sitemaps, redirects, HTML tags — everything is included. Except that Google remains opaque on the exact weighting of each signal.

What does 'correcting the signals pointing to the old URL' mean?

Mueller refers here to signal consistency. If your canonical tag points to example.com/page-a but your XML sitemap contains example.com/page-b, and your internal links lead to example.com/page-c, Google will arbitrate — and you lose control.

Correcting means aligning all indicators: tag, sitemap, internal linking, redirects. Just one contradictory signal can sometimes derail canonicalization, especially if Google gives it more weight than you think.

  • The inspection tool reveals the canonical URL chosen by Google, not necessarily the one you defined
  • The rel="canonical" tag is just one signal among others — redirects, sitemaps, internal links also weigh in
  • Conflicting signals create algorithmic confusion that leads to unpredictable canonicalization choices
  • Correcting means aligning all indicators: HTML, sitemap, linking, redirects — total consistency is required
  • Google remains vague on the exact weighting of each signal, making diagnosis sometimes empirical

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with observed practices in the field?

Yes, it accurately reflects what we find: Google never relies solely on one directive. However, Mueller oversimplifies. He refers to 'correcting the signals' as if it were just a simple checklist — while in reality, the weighting of signals remains a black box.

Instances where a perfectly configured canonical tag is ignored in favor of a recurring internal link? Common. Sitemaps that overwrite the tag? Frequent. The problem is that Google never tells you which signal carries the most weight in your specific context. [To be verified] — but it seems that massive internal linking to a non-canonical URL can overshadow the HTML tag.

What nuances should be added to this official advice?

The inspection tool shows the accepted canonical URL, fine. But it doesn't always tell you why it was chosen or how to rectify it effectively. The reasons listed are often vague: 'User-selected URL differs from Google's' — thanks, we understood that.

Specifically, you need to cross-reference multiple sources: check server logs for hidden redirects, analyze internal linking with Screaming Frog, scrutinize external backlinks using Ahrefs or Majestic. The Search Console tool is a starting point, not a turnkey solution.

In what cases does this rule not apply — or fail?

On massive sites with thousands of URL variants (e-commerce with filters, complex pagination), aligning all signals turns into a daunting task. You correct one signal, another misaligns — and Google takes weeks to recrawl to account for your adjustments.

Another edge case: multilingual or multi-regional sites with hreflang. If your hreflang tags point to different URLs than your canonicals, Google can get confused — and the inspection tool won’t help you untangle this mess.

Warning: The inspection tool works URL by URL. On a site with 10,000 pages facing massive canonicalization issues, you won’t be able to diagnose everything manually. Cross-referencing with GSC exports, technical crawls, and analysis scripts is necessary — the tool alone is insufficient at scale.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do to master canonicalization?

First, systematically audit all your strategic URLs via the inspection tool. Compare the declared canonical URL (HTML tag) with the one retained by Google. If they diverge, list all signals at play: sitemap, redirects, internal linking, backlinks.

Next, fix in the following priority order: remove unwanted 301/302 redirects, clean up the XML sitemap to keep only the desired canonicals, adjust internal linking to point massively to the correct URL. Never settle for the canonical tag alone — it's the weakest signal in the case of a conflict.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided in managing canonicals?

Never declare a canonical URL that returns a 404 or 301. Google hates blatant inconsistencies — you lose all algorithmic credibility. Another common error: canonical tags pointing in loops or towards non-indexable URLs (blocked by robots.txt, set to noindex).

Also avoid cross-canonicals: page A canonical to B, page B canonical to A. This occurs more often than one might think, especially on sites with dynamic URL management — and it’s a nightmare to detect without in-depth technical crawling.

How can you check if your site adheres to best practices?

Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or OnCrawl, export all canonical tags, cross-reference with your XML sitemap and redirects. Look for blatant inconsistencies: canonical URLs not present in the sitemap, redirected URLs that are still canonical elsewhere.

Then, sample 20-30 strategic URLs and check them manually via the inspection tool. If Google respects your directives on this sample, you’re probably good — otherwise, dig deeper into the conflicting signals identified.

  • Audit all strategic URLs via the inspection tool to compare declared canonical vs. the one retained by Google
  • Remove any unwanted 301/302 redirects that lead Google to undesirable URLs
  • Clean the XML sitemap to keep only validated canonical URLs
  • Adjust internal linking to point massively to the desired canonicals, not the variants
  • Avoid canonicals pointing to error URLs (404, 301) or non-indexable URLs (noindex, blocked by robots.txt)
  • Regularly crawl with Screaming Frog to identify inconsistencies between tags, sitemap, and redirects
Canonicalization relies on total signal coherence. The inspection tool diagnoses, but it's up to you to untangle contradictions — HTML tag, sitemap, redirects, internal linking. Just one deviant signal can lead Google to the wrong URL. On complex or large-scale sites, these optimizations can quickly become a technical headache. If you lack the time or tools to audit everything, hiring a specialized SEO agency can save you months of erratic canonicalization and lost rankings — tailored support can effectively resolve these structural issues.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

L'outil d'inspection d'URL peut-il forcer Google à changer l'URL canonique retenue ?
Non, il ne fait que diagnostiquer. Pour changer la canonical retenue, il faut corriger les signaux contradictoires (balise, sitemap, redirections, liens) et attendre que Google recrawle et réévalue.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google prenne en compte une correction de canonical ?
Ça dépend de la fréquence de crawl de vos pages. Sur des URLs stratégiques crawlées quotidiennement, quelques jours à 2 semaines. Sur des pages profondes, plusieurs semaines voire mois.
Que faire si Google persiste à ignorer ma balise canonical malgré tous les signaux alignés ?
Vérifiez les backlinks externes — s'ils pointent massivement vers l'URL non souhaitée, Google peut la privilégier. Tentez de rediriger l'ancienne URL en 301 vers la bonne, signal ultime et sans ambiguïté.
Peut-on utiliser la balise canonical pour fusionner du contenu dupliqué sans redirection ?
Oui, c'est l'usage classique : plusieurs URLs similaires pointent via canonical vers une version maître. Google consolide alors les signaux (backlinks, autorité) sur cette version unique.
L'outil d'inspection fonctionne-t-il pour diagnostiquer les problèmes de canonical sur mobile vs desktop ?
Depuis le mobile-first indexing, Google crawle principalement la version mobile. L'outil affiche la canonical retenue pour cette version. Si vos balises diffèrent entre mobile et desktop, c'est la version mobile qui compte désormais.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Domain Name Search Console

🎥 From the same video 2

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 22/04/2020

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