Official statement
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Google recommends using the nofollow attribute on links from guest content to avoid any suspicion of manipulation. This guideline aims to protect publishing sites from potential penalties associated with artificial link schemes. In practical terms, this means that guest blogging should be seen purely as a visibility lever, without direct SEO benefits from PageRank transfer.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize nofollow in guest publications?
Google's position is based on a historical fear: massive guest blogging networks have long been hijacked to manipulate rankings. Since Matt Cutts in 2014, the Mountain View firm has reiterated that any link obtained through a guest article should be seen as potentially problematic if it transfers SEO juice.
John Mueller specifies that using nofollow secures the approach. The underlying message? Google doesn’t want you to buy positioning disguised as editorial collaboration. Nofollow then becomes a form of declaration of intent: "this link serves visibility, not ranking".
What distinguishes a legitimate guest post from a manipulative scheme?
The line is blurry — and that’s exactly the problem. A quality guest content published on a relevant media should, in theory, merit a dofollow link. But Google prefers a binary rule: if the link is in an article you didn’t write for your own site, make it nofollow.
This guideline purposely disregards the nuances. An expert contributing to a recognized industry blog adds value, but Google prefers to err on the side of maximum caution. As a result, even healthy editorial collaborations fall under the same umbrella as content farms.
Does nofollow really negate all SEO benefits of guest blogging?
Not entirely. Even with a nofollow attribute, a link from a site with high thematic authority generates qualified traffic, enhances brand recognition, and may indirectly influence brand search signals. Google captures these user interactions.
Moreover, nofollow is now just a hint since 2019, not an absolute directive. Google can choose to follow or not follow the link for crawling and indexing. But in terms of PageRank, the official directive remains strict: don’t count on it.
- Nofollow protects the host site from penalty risks linked to link schemes.
- Guest blogging remains a visibility lever — branding, traffic, industry recognition — even without transferring SEO juice.
- Google treats nofollow as a "hint" since March 2019, but guarantees no ranking benefits.
- The distinction between legitimate content and manipulation hinges on editorial intent, which is rarely obvious to the algorithm.
- A well-placed nofollow link can still generate qualified referral traffic and conversions.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this directive consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Yes and no. In practice, top media outlets (Forbes, TechCrunch, major industry publications) do systematically place nofollow on author or external contributor links. They apply this rule out of legal and editorial caution, regardless of Google’s Guidelines.
On the other hand, many authoritative niche blogs continue to grant dofollow links in quality guest posts without suffering visible penalties. The algorithmic reality is more nuanced than the official discourse: Google seems to tolerate dofollow when the editorial context and content quality are there. [To be verified]: no public data confirms a high penalty rate in this specific segment.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
First point: Google talks about "creation of guest publication content", a deliberately broad formulation. Does this include an article co-written with the host site's editorial team? An expert writing a monthly piece for an industry media outlet? The directive remains binary, while the editorial reality is a spectrum.
Second nuance: Mueller mentions "avoiding link manipulation issues" but does not specify the risk threshold. Does a site with 2-3 dofollow guest posts a year face the same danger as a platform publishing 50 per month? Volume, anchor diversity, and thematic relevance likely play a decisive role — but Google refuses to document these variables.
In what cases should this rule not be applied blindly?
If you are a recognized expert in your field and a reputable media outlet invites you to publish a thorough analysis, a dofollow link to your site or a relevant resource remains defensible. The editorial context prevails: if the article adds genuine value and the link fits naturally within the discourse, the risk of manual penalty is low.
But beware: this tolerance is never guaranteed. Google can shift its stance at any moment, and manual action is still possible if the spam team detects a systematic pattern. Let’s be honest: navigating this gray area requires sharp expertise and a close reading of the Quality Rater Guidelines.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely if you publish or accept guest content?
From the publisher’s side (the one hosting the guest post), the guideline is clear: systematically enforce the rel="nofollow" or rel="sponsored" attribute on all outbound links in content written by third parties. This protects you from potential sanctions related to unnatural link schemes. Document this policy in your contributor guidelines.
From the contributor's side (the one writing the guest post), accept that the main benefit is visibility, qualified traffic, and industry recognition. Never negotiate a dofollow link as a condition of publication — this turns the collaboration into a link exchange, which Google targets directly. Focus on editorial quality and thematic alignment.
What mistakes should be avoided in implementing this recommendation?
A classic mistake: applying nofollow only on "commercial" links and leaving dofollow on links to "useful" external resources. Google does not make this distinction. If the content is written by an external author for promotional purposes, all links must be treated consistently.
Another trap: using nofollow in appearance while masking dofollow redirects on the server side or via JavaScript. These techniques are detectable and can lead to much harsher penalties than a simple openly admitted dofollow link. Transparency remains the best defense against manual audits.
How can you check that your site complies with this directive?
Regularly audit your published content with a SEO crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl, Botify) to list all outbound links present in guest articles. Cross-reference this data with your CMS: identify non-permanent authors, then check that their links have the appropriate attribute.
If you discover old guest posts with dofollow links, two options: either switch them to nofollow (cautious solution), or evaluate on a case-by-case basis the editorial quality and real risk. A substantive article published three years ago on a thematic site with a relevant contextual link does not necessarily warrant a retroactive modification — but a pattern of 20 dofollow guest posts in six months does.
- Impose
rel="nofollow"orrel="sponsored"on all outbound links in guest content you publish. - Document this policy in your contributor guidelines and have it explicitly signed.
- Regularly audit your published content with a crawler to detect non-compliant dofollow links.
- Never negotiate a dofollow link as a condition for publishing a guest post — this transforms the approach into a link scheme.
- Prioritize editorial quality and thematic alignment over the volume of guest publications.
- Diversify your link acquisition levers to avoid relying solely on guest blogging.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je mettre tous les liens de mes guest posts en nofollow, même ceux vers des ressources purement informatives ?
Un lien nofollow dans un guest post a-t-il encore une valeur SEO indirecte ?
Puis-je risquer une pénalité si je laisse quelques liens dofollow dans des guest posts de haute qualité ?
Faut-il modifier rétroactivement les anciens guest posts pour ajouter du nofollow ?
Le rel='sponsored' est-il préférable au rel='nofollow' pour les liens de guest posts ?
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