Official statement
Other statements from this video 25 ▾
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- 12:10 Pourquoi les balises rel='next' et rel='prev' échouent-elles sur des pages en noindex ?
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- 16:06 Faut-il vraiment optimiser ses meta descriptions si Google les réécrit ?
- 16:16 Liens internes relatifs ou absolus : y a-t-il vraiment un impact SEO ?
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- 17:31 Les featured snippets de mauvaise qualité révèlent-ils une faille algorithmique de Google ?
- 20:00 Rel=next/prev fonctionne-t-il encore avec des pages en noindex ?
- 24:11 Les snippets en vedette vont-ils vraiment s'étendre au-delà des définitions ?
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Google uses meta descriptions in snippets only if they are relevant to the entered query. Otherwise, the search engine pulls directly from the page content to generate a more suitable excerpt. This dynamic logic forces SEOs to rethink their approach: a seemingly perfect meta description on paper can be ignored if it does not precisely match the search intent detected by Google.
What you need to understand
Why does Google ignore certain meta descriptions?
Google does not read your meta descriptions as a mandatory field to display systematically. The engine evaluates their relevance to the query typed by the user. If the content of the meta description does not match the detected intent, Google skips it and generates a snippet from the visible text of the page.
This decision is based on a simple principle: maximizing user satisfaction. A relevant snippet increases the click-through rate, improves the experience, and reduces the return to the SERPs. Therefore, Google favors a dynamic excerpt that aligns with the query rather than a static text that could be disconnected.
What does Google consider as “relevant” for a query?
Relevance is based on the semantic proximity between the keywords of the query and the content of your meta description. If the user searches for “buy women's running shoes” and your meta only talks about “sports collection,” Google may deem the gap too significant and prefer a passage from the content that explicitly mentions “women's running shoes.”
The engine also analyzes the context of the query: informational, transactional, or navigational. A sales-oriented meta description for an informational query is likely to be bypassed in favor of a more neutral excerpt pulled from the body text.
How does Google select the replacement content?
When Google discards your meta description, it scans the page content to identify the most relevant passages in relation to the query. The engine applies semantic matching algorithms to extract sentences or paragraphs that contain the searched terms or their close synonyms.
These excerpts can come from anywhere on the page: introduction, subheadings, bullet lists, FAQs. Google can even concatenate several fragments from different areas to compose a coherent snippet. The displayed result is hence not necessarily a continuous block of text as it appears on your page.
- Google prioritizes query-snippet relevance over the systematic display of the meta description.
- The semantic proximity between the query and the meta description determines whether it will be used or not.
- The replacement content is dynamically extracted from the body of the page based on algorithmic matching criteria.
- The same URL can generate different snippets depending on the queries that lead to it.
- The type of search intent (informational, transactional, navigational) influences the choice of the snippet.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement truly reflect the observed behavior in practice?
Yes, without a doubt. Empirical tests have shown for years that Google massively rewrites meta descriptions. According to some field studies, the rewriting rate reaches 60 to 70 percent of cases. This is not a bug: it is a deliberate strategic choice by the engine.
What is concerning is that Google remains intentionally vague about the exact criteria for triggering. “Relevant to the query” is a catchall phrase. What semantic distance does it tolerate? What contextual signals carry weight? No precise answers. [To be verified]: the absence of technical documentation on relevance thresholds makes any scientific optimization impossible.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
First nuance: Google can also ignore your meta description for technical reasons, not just semantic ones. A meta that is too short (< 70 characters), too long (> 320 characters on mobile), stuffed with keywords, or duplicated across several pages will often trigger a replacement, even if it is relevant.
Second nuance: the snippet displayed is not always better than your meta description. We regularly see automatically generated excerpts that are poorly cut, unengaging, or out of context. Google optimizes for semantic relevance, not for copywriting or click-through rate.
In what cases does this rule not strictly apply?
For brand or navigational queries, Google tends to respect the original meta description more. If the user searches for “Company Name,” the engine assumes that you know what you are doing and generally displays your meta as it is, unless it is truly aberrant.
Pages with featured snippets or rich results partially escape this logic. Google can display a structured excerpt drawn from the content while also showing a meta description in the classic snippet below. The selection rules differ depending on the activated enriched result format.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should you take to maximize the use of your meta descriptions?
First, align each meta description with the primary intent of the page. Identify the main target query and integrate its exact terms into the meta, not just synonyms. Google looks for strong matching signals.
Next, optimize the length according to the device. On desktop, aim for 140-160 characters. On mobile, stay between 100-120 characters to avoid truncation. Test your snippets with SERP simulators to anticipate the actual display.
Finally, write unique meta descriptions for each page. Massive duplication prompts Google to generate its own excerpts to differentiate results. A site with 500 pages using 5 rotating meta descriptions is an invitation for systematic replacement.
What common mistakes cause Google to reject meta descriptions?
The number one mistake: keyword stuffing. A meta that lists “running shoes, sports shoes, women's shoes, cheap shoes” without a coherent sentence will be ignored. Google detects spam and prefers a natural excerpt from the content.
The second frequent mistake: disconnection between the meta and the actual content of the page. If your meta promises “complete guide 2025” while the page is three years old and has never been updated, Google may deem the meta misleading and replace it with a factual excerpt.
The third pitfall: ignoring intention variations on the same page. A product page may rank for informational queries (“product X reviews”) and transactional queries (“buy product X”). Your meta description can only address one intention. The page content must be rich enough to serve as a source for other snippets.
How to audit and correct meta descriptions ignored by Google?
Use Google Search Console to identify pages where the displayed snippet differs from the stated meta. Cross-reference with CTR data: a performing automatically generated snippet may signal that your initial meta was off-target.
Next, analyze the actual queries that lead to each URL. If 80% of the traffic comes via long-tail queries not mentioned in your meta, it is normal for Google to bypass it. Two options: adjust the meta to cover the main semantic cluster or enrich the content so that auto-generated snippets are more relevant.
Finally, test live: type your target queries in private browsing and see which snippet displays. If Google uses your meta, confirm. If not, compare the generated excerpt with your meta and identify the semantic or structural gap that triggered the replacement.
- Align each meta description with the primary search intent of the page using the exact terms from the target query.
- Adhere to optimal lengths: 140-160 characters for desktop, 100-120 for mobile, to avoid truncation.
- Write unique meta descriptions for each page, never massive duplication.
- Avoid keyword stuffing and favor natural and engaging sentences.
- Audit via Search Console the pages where Google systematically replaces the meta with a generated excerpt.
- Enrich the page content with optimized passages to serve as a source for alternative snippets.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google affiche-t-il toujours la meta description que j'ai rédigée ?
Pourquoi Google remplace-t-il ma meta description par un extrait du contenu ?
Est-ce que cela vaut encore la peine de rédiger des meta descriptions ?
Comment savoir si Google utilise ma meta description ou génère un snippet ?
Peut-on forcer Google à toujours afficher notre meta description ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h13 · published on 26/06/2017
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