Official statement
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- 11:01 Pourquoi les temps de réponse serveur peuvent-ils saboter votre crawl budget ?
- 16:16 Google supprime-t-il massivement les résultats hackés de ses SERP ?
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Google claims not to favor any specific method for structuring H1-H6 headings in HTML5, including semantic tags like section, article, or aside. Choose the structure that fits your architecture without fearing SEO penalties. However, this apparent neutrality hides practical subtleties that must be mastered to avoid compromising the indexing and understanding of your content.
What you need to understand
What is the difference between classic HTML structure and semantic HTML5?
Before HTML5, the hierarchy of headings followed a strict model: one H1 per page, then H2, H3, etc. in cascading order. This approach remained simple and universal.
HTML5 introduced tags like section, article, aside, nav which theoretically allow resetting the heading hierarchy within each container. An H1 in an article can coexist with an H1 in a sidebar, each forming its own semantic context.
Google states it does not favor one method over the other. Translation? Their document understanding algorithm interprets both structures without any bonuses or penalties. No higher ranking if you use HTML5 tags, no lower ranking if you stick to classic markup.
Why is this statement coming out now?
This clarification addresses years of debate within the SEO community. Some consultants religiously recommended the single H1, while others advocated full use of the HTML5 model with nested sections.
The confusion arose from the fact that browsers never really implemented the HTML5 outline algorithm as intended. Google clarifies: it doesn't matter, their crawlers extract meaning independently of your technical choice. What matters is the logical consistency of your content hierarchy.
What remains critical in the hierarchy of headings?
If technical structure is not important, semantic logic remains crucial. Google still analyzes how you organize information: a main heading that summarizes the topic, subheadings that break down concepts, a clear progression.
A site that multiplies H1s without editorial reasoning or uses H3 before H2 sends a signal of editorial disorganization. It is not the HTML tag that penalizes, but the inconsistency that hinders the algorithm's understanding of the content.
- HTML5 technical structure vs. classic: Google does not distinguish between the two approaches
- Logical hierarchy: Remains the determining criterion for content understanding
- Editorial consistency: Headings should reflect a clear organization, not just adhere to a technical standard
- Semantic tags: Usable without risk, but do not generate measurable SEO bonuses
- Multiple H1s: Technically accepted if justified by the editorial structure of the content
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. In technical audits conducted on several hundred sites, it is observed that Google does indeed index pages with very diverse HTML structures without apparent penalties. Sites with 3-4 H1s rank as well as their competitors with a single H1.
But beware of survivor bias. Sites that perform well with multiple H1s generally have a strong domain authority and quality content that compensates. On weaker sites, a disorganized structure may amplify other negative signals. [To verify]: it is impossible to completely isolate this factor from other variables such as internal linking or content freshness.
What nuances should be added to this stated neutrality?
Google says it does not favor a method, but their documentation on rich snippets and featured snippets shows that they use the hierarchy of headings to extract structured snippets. A chaotic structure reduces your chances of appearing in these premium positions.
A/B tests show that even if overall ranking does not change, organic CTR varies depending on the clarity of your snippets. A poorly structured hierarchy generates confusing snippets in the SERPs. This is not direct ranking, but it is lost traffic nonetheless.
Another critical point: accessibility. Screen readers rely on the structure of headings to navigate. An illogical hierarchy penalizes the user experience for individuals with disabilities, which can indirectly affect your behavioral metrics tracked by Google.
In which cases does this rule apply differently?
For e-commerce sites with automatically generated product pages, there is a temptation to multiply H1s for each block (product title, reviews, similar products). Technically tolerated, but if your pages already lack unique content, this multiplication further dilutes the main signal.
On long-form contents like guides or blog articles exceeding 3000 words, an HTML5 structure with distinct sections actually helps the extraction of passages for featured snippets. Here, the use of semantic tags adds concrete value even if Google claims to ignore it.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely with your headings?
Prioritize logical consistency over technical compliance. Ask yourself: can a human reading only my headings understand the architecture of my content? If yes, you're good.
For new sites or redesigns, adopt a convention and stick to it. Either you stick to a classic single H1 (easier to maintain), or you fully utilize HTML5 with semantic sections (more complex but useful for large structured content).
On existing sites that are already performing, do not change anything. Massively modifying the heading structure without a clear editorial reason is an unnecessary risk. Google tolerates both approaches, but does not appreciate structural changes without added value for the user.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not multiply H1s just to stuff keywords. This is the classic mistake: thinking that 3 H1s with your main query are better than one. Google detects this over-optimization and may devalue the overall relevance of the page.
Avoid bizarre level jumps: going from H2 to H5 without intermediate H3-H4s. Even though Google says it tolerates various structures, these logical breaks hinder the extraction of structured information for featured snippets.
Do not let your CMS automatically generate headings without editorial control. WordPress, Shopify, or PrestaShop often use H2s for sidebars or footers. If you do not have editorial governance over these elements, you dilute your main signal.
How to check if your current structure is optimal?
Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or OnCrawl and export the distribution of headings by level. Identify pages with more than 3 H1s, level jumps, empty headings. Prioritize corrections on your strategic pages first.
Test your main pages in Google's rich results testing tool. If your structured snippets are showing bizarre or out-of-context headings, it means your hierarchy is disrupting automatic extraction.
Analyze your behavioral metrics in GA4: time on page, scroll depth, bounce rate. A confusing structure often generates weak engagement signals, even if ranking holds. Compare with well-structured competitors to identify gaps.
- Audit the hierarchy of headings with a complete technical crawler
- Check the extraction of featured snippets on your key pages
- Standardize the heading convention across the site
- Correct level jumps and multiple H1s without editorial justification
- Test the accessibility of your pages with a screen reader
- Document your structural choices in an internal editorial guide
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je utiliser plusieurs H1 sur une même page sans risque SEO ?
Les balises section et article d'HTML5 apportent-elles un avantage SEO ?
Faut-il corriger des pages qui ont déjà plusieurs H1 et qui rankent bien ?
La hiérarchie des titres influence-t-elle les featured snippets ?
Un CMS qui génère automatiquement plusieurs H1 pose-t-il problème ?
🎥 From the same video 6
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 31 min · published on 01/10/2015
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