Official statement
Other statements from this video 24 ▾
- 3:13 404 ou 410 : quelle erreur HTTP choisir pour accélérer la désindexation d'une URL ?
- 5:13 Google supporte-t-il vraiment la directive crawl-delay dans robots.txt ?
- 5:17 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il la directive crawl-delay dans robots.txt ?
- 7:52 Comment écrire rel=nofollow sans risquer d'être ignoré par Google ?
- 8:54 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment l'indexation des URLs avec paramètres ?
- 9:12 La balise canonique évite-t-elle vraiment l'indexation des URLs à paramètres ?
- 11:44 Le texte incrusté dans les images est-il invisible pour Google ?
- 11:57 Pourquoi Google peine-t-il à lire le texte intégré dans vos images ?
- 15:17 Le fichier disavow agit-il vraiment au moment du crawl ou plus tard ?
- 18:17 Google privilégie-t-il vraiment le desktop pour le classement des sites responsive ?
- 19:58 Faut-il vraiment pointer le mobile vers le desktop avec rel=canonical ?
- 20:25 Faut-il vraiment utiliser 'noindex' pour économiser des ressources de crawl ?
- 22:14 La pagination affecte-t-elle vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
- 24:02 Pourquoi vos rich snippets disparaissent-ils du jour au lendemain ?
- 24:17 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il d'afficher vos rich snippets malgré un balisage Schema.org impeccable ?
- 28:09 Les communiqués de presse tuent-ils votre stratégie de backlinks ?
- 33:26 Faut-il vraiment noindexer toutes les pages de coupons sans offres actives ?
- 36:08 Le texte ALT des images influence-t-il vraiment l'indexation et le classement dans Google ?
- 37:21 Reformuler des articles de news suffit-il encore pour ranker sur Google ?
- 40:58 Faut-il vraiment attendre la prochaine mise à jour Penguin pour sortir d'une pénalité ?
- 49:00 Comment Google détecte-t-il qu'une requête nécessite l'affichage de Maps dans les résultats ?
- 52:29 Le désaveu de liens protège-t-il vraiment contre le netlinking négatif ?
- 56:37 Les mots-clés dans les URLs influencent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
- 62:16 Un site avec quelques pages uniques mais beaucoup de contenu dupliqué risque-t-il une pénalité globale ?
Google confirms that the cache can indicate if a disavowed link has been taken into account, but this information is not 100% reliable. The index updates asynchronously compared to the cache, creating a time lag between the two systems. Specifically, a link can be neutralized in the index without the cache reflecting this immediately, making this verification method approximate for auditing the effectiveness of a disavow file.
What you need to understand
What is the difference between Google's cache and the main index?
The Google cache represents a frozen copy of your page as Googlebot saw it during its last visit. It's a snapshot stored for quick display of results and serves as a crawl reference.
The main index, on the other hand, constitutes the living database that powers search results. It integrates hundreds of ranking signals, including backlinks, and updates continuously through asynchronous processes. A link can be reevaluated in the index without the page being recrawled, creating a lag with the cache.
How was the cache supposed to confirm the effect of a disavow?
Some practitioners checked the cached source code to spot nofollow attributes added to outgoing links or structural changes after submitting a disavow file. The idea was: if Google had recrawled and reprocessed the page, the cache should show the changes.
The problem? This logic assumes perfect synchronization between crawling, indexing, and cache refresh. However, Google now handles these processes in a decoupled manner. A link can be disavowed and neutralized in the PageRank calculation without the cache being refreshed.
Why does this statement challenge a common practice?
For years, checking the cache was an SEO reflex to confirm that Google had considered critical changes. With this clarification, Mueller partially invalidates this method for disavow operations.
The index can incorporate a disavow without updating the cache, skewing the audit. You might believe that a toxic link is still active while it has already been neutralized in terms of ranking, or vice versa. This asymmetry complicates post-disavow diagnostics and forces reliance on other indicators.
- The Google cache is just a static copy, not a real-time reflection of the index
- The index updates independently of the cache refresh after a disavow
- Checking the cache to confirm a disavow can generate false positives or negatives
- Cross-referencing multiple data sources is essential to validate the actual effect of a disavow
- Google now favors asynchronous processes between crawling, indexing, and caching
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. For several years, it has been observed that some pages see their positions fluctuate without their cache changing at all. Backlinks disappear from the Search Console while the cache is weeks old. Google has clearly segmented its processing pipelines for increased efficiency.
Crawling does not automatically trigger a complete update of all signals anymore. The index can reevaluate a link profile through external signals (de-indexing of source pages, penalties from referring domains) without recrawling the target page. This architecture explains why the cache is becoming a less reliable indicator.
What nuances need to be added to this statement?
Mueller says the cache "can" confirm a disavow, not that it is useless. In some cases, if Google recrawls a page immediately after processing the disavow file and that crawl triggers a cache update, then yes, you might see a trace. But this is random.
[To be verified]: Google does not specify the average time between submitting a disavow and its effective integration into the index. Real-world feedback ranges from a few days to several weeks, or even months for sites that are not crawled often. Without official metrics, it is impossible to determine whether a disavow "didn't work" or is simply pending processing.
In what cases does this verification method become completely obsolete?
For sites with a low crawl budget, the cache may be several months old. Checking something as volatile as a backlink through a fossilized cache makes no sense. Similarly, on sites with thousands of pages and complex link profiles, the cache of a specific URL reflects only a tiny part of the overall link graph.
Specifically, if you manage an e-commerce site with 50,000 product listings and a history of negative SEO, you will never be able to audit the effectiveness of a massive disavow by checking the cache. You need to cross-reference: changes in organic traffic, variations in positions for sensitive keywords, analysis of referring domains in the Search Console, and ideally a third-party tool to track the effective disappearance of toxic links.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do specifically after submitting a disavow file?
Don't just check the cache. Set up a weekly tracking of your positions on a sample of strategic queries, especially those affected by toxic links. Also, monitor fluctuations in organic traffic through Google Analytics or your usual tracking tool.
Regularly check the Search Console to see if the disavowed domains continue to appear in your link profile. If they do, it doesn't necessarily mean that the disavow is failing: Google displays them but may neutralize them in ranking. Cross-check with a tool like Ahrefs or Majestic to see if these links persist in their third-party index.
What mistakes should you avoid during the post-disavow audit?
Classic mistake: thinking that an unchanged cache means that the disavow has not been taken into account. You risk resubmitting the file several times unnecessarily, which doesn't speed anything up and may even create confusion if you modify the list in the meantime.
Another pitfall: interpreting a drop in positions as proof that the disavow has neutralized good links. Sometimes, the drop is due to a simultaneous algorithm update or an unrelated technical issue. Isolate the variables before concluding. If you have massively disavowed, analyze the true quality of the deleted links through a manual audit on a sample.
How can you implement reliable monitoring of a disavow's effectiveness?
Create a dashboard that includes: daily positions on 20-30 representative keywords, organic traffic by channel, the number of active referring domains (Search Console + third-party tool), and ideally a global toxicity score if your tool offers one. Take snapshots of these metrics before submitting the disavow.
Reassess at D+15, D+30, D+60. Look for patterns: a gradual rise in targeted queries, stabilization of traffic after a downturn, a decrease in the number of detected toxic domains. If no positive signals appear after 60 days on a site that is normally crawled, consider a more in-depth audit to identify other blocking factors.
- Track positions and organic traffic on a sample of strategic queries before and after the disavow
- Check the Search Console to verify the persistence of disavowed domains in the link profile
- Cross-reference with a third-party tool (Ahrefs, Majestic) to confirm the effective disappearance of toxic backlinks
- Never rely solely on the Google cache to validate the effectiveness of a disavow file
- Document the initial state and reassess at D+15, D+30, D+60 to detect improvement patterns
- Isolate variables: distinguish the impact of the disavow from simultaneous algorithm updates or technical issues
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'un fichier disavow soit pris en compte par Google ?
Le cache Google affiche toujours les liens désavoués, est-ce normal ?
Peut-on forcer Google à recrawler une page pour accélérer la prise en compte d'un disavow ?
Quels outils permettent de vérifier l'efficacité d'un disavow sans passer par le cache ?
Faut-il re-soumettre le fichier disavow si le cache ne change pas ?
🎥 From the same video 24
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h04 · published on 09/05/2014
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