: Are penalties applied if you have too many 404 errors on your site? Do the search engines take the number of 404 errors returned by a site into account when calculating the site rank? For
Do the search engines take the number of 404 errors returned by a site into account when calculating the site rank? For example I have 8,000 404 errors and I am thinking that that's affecting my SEO in a negative way.
However, I read this Google Webmaster Central article about 404 errors which suggests that they are not always a negative quality indicator.
So I am confused...are high numbers of 404 errors harmful to a site or not?
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404 errors on your site don't affect SEO in the sense that having too many 404's will reduce your ranking, there is however a caveat to this and that third party links to your site which terminate at 404 pages won't pass link juice and so your rank won't improve from that link, certainly not the end of the world for only one or two links but when you are talking about a large number of links that's when it can have a drastic effect on your site.
The important points to remember are...
Always return a proper 404 header and not a soft 404 otherwise the search engine will think the 404 not found page is the actual content page.
Make sure that if you rename or move content where previous links will no longer work instead of returning a 404 error you use a 301 redirect or a HTTP Moved header to tell the crawler where the content is now and have the link updated in the index as well as still get the link juice.
In Google Webmaster Tools it says 'they generally don't hurt your ranking.'
However, they are bad for user experience and search engines don't buy things.
To quote the Google Intro to SEO .pdf:
Blockquote
...you should base your optimization decisions first
and foremost on what's best for the visitors of your site. They're the
main consumers of your content and are using search engines to find
your work.
Google's John Mueller says:
404 errors on invalid URLs do not harm your site’s indexing or ranking in any way. It doesn’t matter if there are 100 or 10 million, they won’t harm your site’s ranking.
(as long as the 404 isn't coming from pages you want to see ranking)
It depends on why the 404 errors are coming up but in general terms, yes, high numbers of 404 errors can count against the quality metrics of your site and hurt your rankings.
Whenever Google spiders the web, they are following links from external sites to yours, your own internal structure, and your past indexed pages. While 404s themselves are not a negative indicator according to the linked article above, 404s of expected content due to errors in your internal linking or server configuration (i.e., a bad redirect rule) will lower the number of documents you have indexed and that is the "penalty" applied.
There are several things you can do to mitigate the effect of 404 errors:
Use a custom 404 error page to suggest alternative navigation. The inbound user or robot should be presented links and a menu to assist them in finding other content on your site. Never leave a default 404 server-generated error page in place
If the 404s are caused from external links, use 301 redirects to get the inbounds to the desired location
Use an XML sitemap to tell search engines what exists. This helps to drop dead pages out of their indexes
Follow those simple steps and any penalty caused by excessive 404 errors should fall away over time.
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