Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 1:56 Faut-il vraiment abandonner les URLs mobiles séparées (m.site.com) pour le SEO ?
- 7:06 Les mises à jour principales de Google ciblent-elles vraiment les sites de santé ?
- 13:30 Les liens affiliés doivent-ils vraiment tous être en nofollow pour éviter une pénalité Google ?
- 16:10 Faut-il vraiment soumettre tous vos sitemaps quand vous gérez des millions d'URLs ?
- 17:46 Les Quality Rater Guidelines sont-elles la clé pour survivre aux mises à jour santé de Google ?
- 25:01 Faut-il encore utiliser rel=next et rel=prev pour la pagination ?
- 27:13 Pourquoi Google pousse-t-il JSON-LD pour les données structurées plutôt que les autres formats ?
- 27:17 Faut-il vraiment indexer les pages produits éphémères ou les laisser disparaître ?
- 33:40 Refonte de site : combien de temps durent vraiment les fluctuations de classement ?
- 57:12 Comment vérifier que Google indexe correctement votre JavaScript ?
- 71:54 La longueur d'un contenu impacte-t-elle vraiment son classement Google ?
No, the mere age of a link does not diminish its value according to Google. However, if the page hosting that link slips down in the site's structure or loses thematic relevance, its weight in the algorithm progressively erodes. Thus, the issue is not the age of the link but maintaining the visibility and contextual coherence of the source page.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize context over link age?
The Google algorithm does not operate with a time counter that mechanically devalues old links. That would be absurd: a backlink from a historical reference page — say, a 2012 article still being consulted and updated — retains all its weight. The real depreciation factor is the site's evolving context.
Concretely? If the page linking to you from the site’s homepage drops three levels down in the hierarchy, or if it becomes orphaned, its transmitted authority falls. Not because the link is aging, but because Google continuously reassesses the position and relevance of every URL in the web graph.
What makes a page hosting a link become “less relevant”?
Mueller remains deliberately vague, but we can reconstruct the mechanism. A page loses relevance when its thematic content gradually strays from the main topic of the site, when it is no longer updated in the face of freshly published competitors, or when the internal linking marginalizes it.
Architectural burial also plays a role: a page that used to require three clicks from the root but now demands seven sees its internal PageRank crumble. Google crawls less, indexes with lower priority, and the juice transmitted by its outgoing links melts away. The link technically still exists, but its SEO impact evaporates.
Does the “overall context of the linked site” change the game?
Yes, and this is the most subtle point in the statement. A link does not live in a vacuum: its value also depends on the thematic environment of the site it targets. If your link profile evolves — new backlinks of higher quality, semantic repositioning — the old link may become proportionally less decisive.
Google weighs each link within a dynamic ensemble. A backlink that represented 15% of your authority three years ago may drop to 2% if you have since built a solid netlinking strategy on industry media. The link has not lost absolute value, but its relative weight has diluted.
- The age of a link alone does not trigger any automatic devaluation in the Google algorithm.
- The architecture of the source site and the position of the page hosting the link are critical for maintaining the transmission of authority.
- The thematic context and ongoing relevance of the source page directly influence the perceived value of the link.
- The overall link profile of the target site evolves, affecting the relative weight of each individual backlink.
- The crawl and indexing of the source page determine Google’s ability to consider the link in its calculations.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, and it confirms what has been observed for years regarding ranking variations without changes to our own site. A client may see their positions slide because a partner has restructured their menu, relegating the link page to the footer. No disavowal, no broken links: just an architectural reorganization on the source side.
However, Mueller remains vague about thresholds and timelines. How long does it take for a buried page to lose its impact? What ratio of internal linking triggers depreciation? [To be verified] with real site corpora because Google will never communicate these precise parameters. We're navigating the interpretation of indirect signals here.
What nuances should be added to this general rule?
Firstly, not all links are equal when it comes to burial. An editorial link anchored in evergreen content that is widely consulted will fare better than a link in a dynamic sidebar that nobody scrolls through. The actual click-through rate, user engagement, and perceived freshness of the parent content likely play a buffering role.
Secondly, the notion of “overall context of the linked site” remains blurry. Does Google only aggregate new backlinks, or does it also reassess the retroactive quality of older ones according to the thematic evolution of the target site? The second hypothesis is plausible but difficult to prove without access to PageRank calculation logs. [To be verified] with documented cases of semantic repositioning.
In which cases does this rule not fully apply?
Ultra-authoritative referring domains — government institutions, Ivy League universities, national media — seem to benefit from a certain inertia. A historical link from a .edu may retain its weight even if the source page has dropped in the hierarchy, simply because the domain's trust partially offsets architectural effects.
Very specific anchor texts and links placed in stable thematic hubs also show superior resilience. If the source page remains a reference point in its micro-sector, Google likely maintains a high weighting despite degraded architectural signals. But be cautious: these are empirical observations, not algorithmic certainties.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should be taken to preserve the value of existing backlinks?
Monitor the architectural evolution of sites linking to you, especially those with high authority. Use periodic crawl tools to detect if a partner page moves from two to five clicks from the homepage. A simple Python script with Scrapy can automate this monitoring and trigger an alert when a significant change occurs.
Next, maintain a relationship contact with strategic webmasters. A valuable link that sinks in the architecture deserves a courteous email suggesting an update to the article or a promotion in the menu. Often, the site owner is unaware of the SEO impact of their UX redesign — your signal can reverse the trend before damage is done.
How can you check that your own outbound link pages are not penalizing your partners?
Audit your internal linking with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl, paying attention to the pages hosting your most strategic editorial links. If these pages have a low internal PageRank, excessive click depth, or a poor Google crawl rate, you’re diluting the value transmitted to partner sites — and conversely, you’re likely losing link equity on your own backlinks.
Restructure if necessary: promote evergreen content in the hierarchy, strengthen links to reference pages, and ensure that URLs hosting important outgoing links are crawled regularly. Server logs provide you with the frequency of Googlebot passes — a page crawled once a month transmits less juice than a page visited daily.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided in the long-term management of your backlinks?
Never disavow a link just because it has lost visibility on the source site. It's an emotional reaction based on a misunderstanding of the mechanism. Disavowal is meant to neutralize toxic links (spam, detected PBN), not to manage natural dilution. You risk destroying residual SEO capital without any benefit.
Avoid also believing that an old link is necessarily less valuable. Some practitioners fall into the trap of “perpetual netlinking,” where they constantly chase new backlinks while neglecting the consolidation of existing assets. A three-year-old link on a well-positioned page may sometimes be worth ten recent links on sacrificed blogs buried five clicks deep.
- Establish quarterly monitoring of the architecture of critical referring sites (top 20 backlinks).
- Crawl your own pages hosting strategic outbound links to check their depth and internal PageRank.
- Analyze server logs to identify poorly crawled link pages by Google and optimize their visibility.
- Maintain a relationship contact with high-authority partner webmasters to anticipate redesigns.
- Audit your overall link profile biannually to detect relative dilutions due to new backlink acquisitions.
- Avoid any disavowal of links based solely on architectural visibility loss — disavowal targets toxic links, not weakened ones.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un lien de cinq ans a-t-il moins de valeur qu'un lien récent ?
Comment savoir si un backlink a perdu de sa valeur sans accès aux données Google ?
Dois-je désavouer un lien dont la page source a été enfouie dans le site ?
Le contexte global du site lié inclut-il uniquement les backlinks ou aussi le contenu ?
Un lien dans le footer d'un site perd-il automatiquement de la valeur ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 04/10/2019
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