Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 1:49 RankBrain peut-il pénaliser votre site comme Panda ou Penguin ?
- 7:00 Le contenu dupliqué sur plusieurs canaux peut-il tuer votre visibilité organique ?
- 9:15 Les liens des réseaux sociaux ont-ils un impact sur votre positionnement Google ?
- 10:26 Faut-il absolument placer son sitemap à la racine du domaine ?
- 15:03 Faut-il vraiment indexer vos URLs d'images hébergées sur CDN ?
- 23:42 Republier son contenu sur Medium ou LinkedIn : erreur stratégique ou opportunité SEO ?
- 25:26 La balise canonical accumule-t-elle vraiment tous les signaux SEO comme un lien ?
- 30:03 Google utilise-t-il vos données Analytics pour vous classer ?
- 32:13 Comment gérer les URLs multiples pour un même produit sans tuer votre SEO ?
- 53:06 Pourquoi certains mots clés ne récupèrent-ils jamais après une pénalité Penguin ?
- 56:33 Le schema markup des avis doit-il vraiment se limiter aux pages produits ?
- 73:45 Pourquoi une refonte de site avec migration HTTPS peut-elle plomber votre trafic organique ?
- 78:24 Pourquoi le cache Google affiche-t-il parfois un contenu différent du rendu textuel réel ?
- 80:40 Le titre de page est-il vraiment un facteur de classement direct ?
Google confirms that the canonical tag focuses all SEO signals on the preferred version of shared content across multiple sites. For syndicated publications, pointing to the original prevents the dilution of PageRank and backlinks. This practice remains crucial for media, press agencies, and content platforms that republish their articles across multiple domains.
What you need to understand
Why is this statement relevant for shared publications?
The media, press agencies, and platforms often republish the same content across multiple domains. An article may appear on the main site, regional sites, and syndication partners' sites. Without clear indication, Google treats these versions as duplicate content.
The canonical tag explicitly states: "this page is a copy, the original is over there." Google then transfers ranking signals to the designated URL. Backlinks, authority, PageRank: everything converges to the preferred version instead of dispersing among 5 or 10 identical URLs.
What does "concentrating all signals" actually mean?
A backlink pointing to a syndicated version will be counted for the original if the canonical is in place. Without it, this link benefits the syndicated site, not you. The engagement metrics (click-through rate, time spent) are also consolidated.
Google chooses a URL to display in the SERPs. With a well-implemented canonical, it’s your version that appears. Without it, the engine decides alone and may favor a partner site with more domain authority. You lose visibility and traffic.
In what cases does this practice apply?
Three main scenarios. First case: you are a national media outlet with regional branches. The article on lemonde.fr/politique is replicated on lemonde.fr/ile-de-france/politique. The canonical points to the national version.
Second case: editorial syndication. Your original article is republished verbatim on partner sites. They add a canonical link to your URL. Third case: you manage multiple domains for the same content (multilingual, multiple brands) and want to designate the master URL.
- The canonical is not an absolute directive: Google can ignore it if it contradicts other signals (hreflang, sitemaps, internal links)
- It works cross-domain: an external site can canonicalize to your URL if you are the original publisher
- All signals are transferred: PageRank, backlinks, topical authority, user metrics
- Only one URL is indexed: secondary versions gradually disappear from search results
- Maintain semantic consistency: do not canonicalize to a page with different content, even partially
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, completely. Tests show that backlinks acquired on a canonicalized URL do indeed benefit the original in PageRank calculations. A measurable transfer of authority is observed using tools like Ahrefs or Majestic: the DR/DA of the canonical page increases when the syndicated one receives links.
However, the timing is rarely instantaneous. It may take 3 to 6 weeks for Google to recrawl all versions, consolidate the signals, and adjust rankings. Do not expect an immediate boost after implementation.
What nuances should be noted?
Google says "helps concentrate all signals", not "automatically concentrates". The canonical is a strong suggestion, not an order. If your canonical version has significantly less domain authority than the syndicated site, Google may ignore the tag and index the copy.
Another limitation: the canonical does not solve thin or quality content issues. If your original is poor, transferring signals from 10 mediocre copies won't work miracles. Consolidation amplifies existing quality, it does not create it. [To be verified]: Google communicates little about the relative weight of the canonical compared to other contradictory signals (sitemaps, internal links).
In what cases does this rule not apply?
First case: content variations. If the syndicated version adds local paragraphs, regional citations, it becomes distinct content. Canonicalizing to the original dilutes its specificity. It’s better to let it index independently.
Second case: diverging business goals. You may want the partner site to rank for certain local queries while targeting national ones. The canonical disrupts that strategy. Third case: ephemeral content (very hot news) republished quickly: by the time Google crawls and consolidates, the article is no longer relevant.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely to implement this strategy?
On your own sites (regional, multilingual variations), add <link rel="canonical" href="ORIGINAL_URL"> in the <head> of each secondary version. The URL must be absolute, not relative. Ensure that the canonical URL exists, returns a 200, and is not itself canonicalized elsewhere (no chains).
For external syndication, include a clause in your contracts: "The partner agrees to implement a canonical tag pointing to the provided source URL." Provide the exact URL, check the implementation post-publication via View Source. Automate this verification if you are syndicating on a large scale.
What mistakes should be avoided at all costs?
Do not canonicalize to an URL that redirects (301/302). Google follows the redirection but considers it a confusing signal. Point directly to the final URL. Do not canonicalize a mobile page to its desktop version if you have a separate m. site: use alternate/canonical cross-links.
Avoid self-referential canonicals on all pages by default. They do not necessarily harm, but unnecessarily clutter HTML on unique pages. Reserve the canonical for true duplication cases. And above all: never canonicalize to a different content page to "boost" a weak page. Google detects inconsistency and ignores the tag.
How can you check if your strategy works?
In Google Search Console, under "Coverage" or "Pages": check that secondary versions appear as "Excluded: Duplicate page, canonical URL chosen by user different." This is the normal status. If they remain "Indexed", Google is ignoring your canonical.
Use URL Inspection on a secondary version. In "Coverage", Google indicates the "canonical URL chosen by Google." If it’s your preferred URL, victory. Otherwise, investigate why: domain authority, conflicting signals, too different content. Monitor your backlinks via Ahrefs: if links to the syndicated versions appear in the profile of your canonical URL, the transfer is operating.
- Implement the canonical tag in the
<head>with an absolute URL pointing to the preferred version - Check for the absence of canonical chains: the canonical URL should not point elsewhere
- Contractualize the canonical obligation with external syndication partners
- Regularly audit via Search Console the indexing status of secondary versions
- Use URL Inspection to confirm that Google respects your canonical choice
- Monitor the backlink profile to check for the transfer of signals to the original
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
La balise canonical transfère-t-elle vraiment 100% du PageRank ?
Peut-on utiliser plusieurs canonicals sur une même page ?
Un site externe peut-il refuser d'ajouter ma canonical ?
La canonical remplace-t-elle le noindex pour éviter la duplication ?
Que se passe-t-il si je canonicalise vers une URL qui renvoie une erreur 404 ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 20/09/2016
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