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Official statement

Alt attributes provide information about the image to users who cannot see the images. This benefits accessibility as well as search engines.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 10/02/2021 ✂ 16 statements
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Other statements from this video 15
  1. Google Images sert-il vraiment à trouver des pages web ou juste des images ?
  2. Les données structurées sont-elles vraiment indispensables pour le référencement des images ?
  3. Vos images peuvent-elles vraiment générer du trafic via Google Discover ?
  4. Le contexte visuel suffit-il vraiment à positionner vos images dans Google ?
  5. Où placer vos images pour maximiser leur impact SEO ?
  6. Faut-il vraiment bannir le texte important des images pour le SEO ?
  7. Les images haute résolution améliorent-elles vraiment le trafic SEO ?
  8. Le contenu textuel influence-t-il vraiment le classement des images dans Google Images ?
  9. Faut-il vraiment optimiser Google Images différemment pour mobile et desktop ?
  10. Pourquoi la structure d'URL de vos images peut-elle ruiner votre référencement ?
  11. Pourquoi vos images disparaissent-elles de Google Images malgré un bon référencement ?
  12. Faut-il vraiment bloquer les images dans robots.txt pour les exclure de Google Images ?
  13. Faut-il vraiment activer max-image-preview:large pour apparaître dans Discover ?
  14. Faut-il vraiment ajouter des informations de licence sur vos images pour améliorer leur référencement ?
  15. Lazy-loading et images responsives : la vraie clé du Core Web Vitals ou un conseil générique de Google ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

John Mueller confirms that alt attributes serve two distinct purposes: accessibility for visually impaired users and understanding of images by search engines. For SEO, this means that a well-crafted alt tag improves ranking in Google Images and enriches the semantic context of the page. Practically, each image on your site should have a descriptive alt, not stuffed with keywords, but precise enough for a bot to understand its role.

What you need to understand

Why does Google place such a strong emphasis on alt attributes?

Google can't "see" an image like a human does. The engine relies on surrounding text (caption, adjacent paragraphs, page title) and especially on the alt attribute to understand what the image is about. Without an alt, the crawler can only guess at best, relying on the file name (often uninformative) or completely ignoring the image.

From an accessibility standpoint, screen readers read the alt attribute aloud for visually impaired users. A missing or poorly written alt makes the content incomprehensible for this audience. Google has taken accessibility seriously for several years — it's a quality signal for the site, even if the direct impact on ranking remains unclear.

Does the alt attribute influence ranking in traditional search (text)?

Directly, no. The alt attribute does not improve your page's position in text SERPs in isolation. However, it enriches the overall semantic context of the page: if you publish an article about the Paris marathon with a photo of runners and an alt of "runners crossing the finish line of the Paris marathon," Google better understands the article's topic.

Indirectly, this can influence thematic understanding and thus ranking on long-tail queries. But the main impact lies in Google Images, where the alt is a major ranking factor. If your business depends on Image traffic (e-commerce, galleries, portfolios), neglecting the alt cuts you off from a significant source of visits.

What happens if I put an empty or generic alt?

An empty alt (alt="") is acceptable — and even recommended — for decorative images with no informational value (separators, backgrounds, purely aesthetic icons). This avoids polluting the screen reader user's experience with noise.

On the other hand, a generic alt like "image," "photo," "illustration" adds no value. Google ignores these hollow alts, and you waste an opportunity to contextualize. If you automate alt generation (misconfigured CMS), check that default values are not empty strings or raw file names ("IMG_1234.jpg").

  • Every informative image must have a descriptive and contextualized alt.
  • Decorative images can have an empty alt (alt="") to avoid disrupting screen readers.
  • The alt enriches the semantic context of the page and boosts ranking in Google Images.
  • A generic alt or a file name serves no purpose for Google or for accessibility.
  • Aim for 5 to 15 descriptive, factual words without keyword stuffing.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation consistent with what we observe in practice?

Yes, absolutely. Field tests show that images with descriptive alts rank better in Google Images than those without alts or with generic alts. It is also observed that pages with well-written alts tend to rank better on long-tail queries where the image provides context (e.g., "microservices architecture diagram" rather than just "architecture").

However, the direct impact on text ranking remains difficult to isolate. We know that Google uses visual context to refine thematic understanding, but it is impossible to quantify how many positions you gain by adding alts. What is certain: the absence of an alt causes you to lose Image traffic, and that is measurable.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller discusses accessibility and SEO as if they are two separate benefits. In reality, accessibility has become an indirect quality signal for Google. Websites conforming to WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) tend to perform better overall, even if Google does not explicitly admit it.

Another nuance: not all alts are created equal. An alt stuffed with keywords ("best running shoe Nike cheap promotion") is counterproductive. Google detects spam, and screen readers read unbearable gibberish. The alt must be written for a human first, with relevant keywords appearing naturally. [To verify]: Does Google use image analysis (Vision API) to compare the alt with the actual content of the image? No official confirmation, but tests suggest that alts completely disconnected from the image may be ignored.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

Images in lazy loading or JavaScript may cause issues. If the crawler does not see the image at the time of initial rendering, the alt is not taken into account. Ensure that your lazy-loaded images remain accessible to the crawler (native loading="lazy" attribute, not a homemade script that completely hides the image).

Another edge case: identical image galleries with nearly identical alts. If you have 50 photos of a product from different angles with the same alt, Google may consider this internal duplicate content. Vary the alts to describe what changes ("frontal view," "detail of the sole," "close-up of the zipper").

Note: CMS often generate default alts (file name, article title). Always check that these values make sense before publishing. An auto-generated alt like "IMG_20250115_142305.jpg" is useless and harms accessibility.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to optimize alt attributes?

Audit your existing images. Use Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, or a home-built crawler to list all tags and identify those without alts, with empty alts on important images, or with generic alts. Prioritize strategic pages (product sheets, landing pages, key articles) and correct them first.

For each image, ask yourself: "If I couldn't see this image, what should I know to understand its role in the content?" Describe factually what is visible, integrating the context of the page. Example: for a photo of a smartphone, "iPhone 15 Pro front view showing the OLED screen and titanium design" is better than "smartphone" or "iPhone 15 Pro iPhone 15 Pro buy cheap".

What mistakes should be avoided when writing alt attributes?

Do not duplicate the title or caption in the alt. If the image already has a

tag or an adjacent title describing the image, the alt can be more concise to avoid redundancy. Screen readers read both, so there's no need to repeat word for word.

Avoid phrases like "image of," "photo of," "illustration showing". The screen reader already announces "image", so starting with "image of..." is redundant. Get straight to the point: "Runners at the starting line of the marathon" rather than "Image showing runners at the starting line of the marathon".

How to check that your alt attributes are compliant and effective?

Test accessibility with a screen reader (NVDA on Windows, VoiceOver on Mac). Navigate your pages as a visually impaired user would. If an alt does not make sense when heard, rewrite it. Complement with automated tools (Lighthouse, WAVE, Axe DevTools) that detect images without alts.

On the SEO Images side, monitor your positions and traffic in Google Search Console, Performance tab > Images. If you optimize your alts and Image traffic stagnates after a few weeks, dig deeper: perhaps your images are not compressed enough (Core Web Vitals), or the file name is inconsistent with the alt.

  • Audit all the images on the site to identify those without alt or with generic alt.
  • Write descriptive, factual alts, between 5 and 15 words, without keyword stuffing.
  • Leave alts empty (alt="") only for decorative images.
  • Avoid duplicates between alt, title, and caption — vary the wording.
  • Test accessibility with a screen reader and automated tools.
  • Track Google Images traffic in Search Console to measure the impact.
Optimizing alt attributes requires a thorough audit and careful writing image by image, especially on e-commerce or editorial sites with hundreds of visuals. If you lack internal resources or the volume exceeds your capabilities, consulting a specialized SEO agency can save you time and ensure consistent optimization. Personalized support also helps integrate this best practice into your editorial workflows so that every new image published is compliant from the start.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Faut-il mettre un attribut alt sur toutes les images sans exception ?
Non. Les images purement décoratives (bordures, icônes UI sans valeur sémantique) peuvent avoir un alt vide (alt="") pour éviter de polluer l'expérience des lecteurs d'écran. En revanche, toute image porteuse d'information ou de contexte doit avoir un alt descriptif.
Est-ce que Google pénalise les sites qui n'ont pas d'attributs alt ?
Google ne pénalise pas directement l'absence d'alt, mais vous perdez une opportunité de contexte sémantique. Vos images ne se positionnent pas en Google Images, et le contenu global de la page est moins clair pour le crawler, ce qui peut impacter indirectement le ranking.
Peut-on bourrer les alt de mots-clés pour améliorer le SEO ?
Mauvaise idée. Google détecte le keyword stuffing dans les alt comme ailleurs. Un alt doit décrire factuellement l'image. Si le mot-clé apparaît naturellement, parfait. Sinon, ne forcez pas.
Un alt trop long nuit-il au référencement ?
Google n'impose pas de limite stricte, mais les lecteurs d'écran tronquent souvent au-delà de 125 caractères. Visez un alt concis, entre 5 et 15 mots, qui décrit l'essentiel sans phrase interminable.
Les images en CSS ont-elles besoin d'un attribut alt ?
Non, parce que les images en CSS (background-image) ne portent pas de balise alt. Si l'image a une valeur sémantique, elle doit être en HTML (balise <img>) avec un alt. Les images CSS sont réservées au décor.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Images & Videos

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