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Google Algorithm Updates

 
Google Algorithm Updates

2023 Updates 

Unconfirmed Google Search Algorithm Ranking Update On October 27

On the heels of the last unconfirmed Google Search ranking algorithm update that touched down on October 25th, I am seeing signs of another tremor this morning - October 27th.

Google Search Algorithm Ranking Update October 25 (Unconfirmed)

I am seeing signs of another possible Google Search ranking algorithm update today that kicked off last night into today (October 24 and October 25). 

Google October 2023 Core Update Finished Rolling Out

It took almost the full 14 days, but the Google October 2023 core update is now officially done rolling out. The October 2023 core update started rolling out on October 5, 2023, at 11:54 AM ET and was completed on October 19, 2023, at 11:08 AM ET.

Google October Core Update Heated Weekend Volatility

We are seeing high levels of volatility and SEO industry chatter over the weekend, starting late Friday, October 13th, through Saturday and Sunday. I suspect this is from the Google October 2023 core update and maybe some movement from the Google October 2023 spam update, but less from the spam update.

Google Search Volatility Heats Up As Core Update & Spam Update Rollout

We are now a few days into the two October Google Search algorithm updates, the October 2023 spam update and the October 2023 core update and the Google search results are getting heated. The tracking tools are finally all showing large volatility and the chatter has been heated with both of these updates.

Google October 2023 Core Update Is Live

Google is now also rolling out the October 2023 core update. This is happening while Google is rolling out the October 2023 spam update and only weeks after Google finished rolling out the August 2023 core update.

Google Search Ranking Algorithm Shifts Sunday, October 1st?

I am seeing some early signs of an unconfirmed Google search ranking algorithm update, maybe some small shifts, starting Sunday, October 1st. Only a couple of the tools showed volatility yesterday but there is renewed chatter within the SEO forums as of yesterday.

Google September 2023 Helpful Content Completed Rolling Out - Targeting SEO-First Content

Google, at around 3 am ET this morning, announced that the September 2023 Google helpful content update has finished rolling out. It took about 14 days, starting on September 14, 2023, and completing today on September 28, 2023. This update really went after SEO-first content, which is why the SEO community is so heated about this specific update.

Google Helpful Content Update's Last Surge Of Ranking Fluctuations?

Over the past couple of days, I've seen more chatter of ranking movement for those SEOs initially impacted by the September 2023 helpful content update. I wonder if this is the last push, the last surge, of this helpful content update before Google says this update is done rolling out.

Google September 2023 Helpful Content Update Rolling Out With Improved Classifier

Last night at about 4:20 pm ET, Google began to roll out an update to the Helpful content system - the Google September 2023 Helpful Content Update. What is new is not the part about finding hidden gems (that will come later) but a new "improved classifier."

Google Search Ranking Update Volatility Tremors Around September 12th

I am seeing some early signs of maybe the first set of tremors post the Google August 2023 core update, which completed rolling out on September 7th. The new tremors seemed to have started yesterday morning and seem to be continuing throughout today.


On August 22nd, Google released the August 2023 core update. We did not feel much of any volatility until a few days later, on August 25th. Then we had some movement on that Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, and then it died down for a couple of days, picking up again a few days ago.


As I hinted to in my SEO video recap on Friday, we saw some early signing of an unconfirmed Google Search ranking algorithm update starting Friday, August 18th, and it went into Saturday, August 19th.


It has been a full nine days since I last reported about a Google Search ranking algorithm update and now I am seeing signs of another one starting yesterday, August 3rd through today, August 4th.


I am seeing a significant increase in chatter from within the SEO community around a possible Google Search ranking algorithm update. While most of the tracking tools have calmed, except for Semrush and Mozcast, I am seeing a big spike in SEO chatter yesterday and into today.


Google has created a new landing page in the Google Search Central help documentation section for the latest's major algorithm updates. This is only the updates Google deems "relevant to website owners" and most hyperlink to their announcements on their blog about these updates.


Hey there - it is me again - reporting about another unconfirmed Google search ranking algorithm update. This one seemed to start yesterday, July 12th. I am seeing a lot of chatter amongst the SEO community, and the automated Google tracking tools are also showing heated volatility.


I am really trying not to cover the Google search ranking volatility and not report on another Google search ranking update but today things got super heated again. And don't get me wrong, the Google search results have been very heated for over a month but today, things spiked above those new normal levels.


We are back with you with another report of another unconfirmed Google Search ranking algorithm update. This one seemed to have kicked off yesterday, June 28th and is heating up even more today. Yea, it has been a very volatile past several weeks with the Google Search results and even I am kind of tired on reporting on this.


I am seeing some early signs of another Google search ranking algorithm update, as the Google search results seem more volatile than normal and there has been an increase in SEO chatter.


It has actually been a couple of weeks since we last reported on a Google search ranking update, May 22/23rd, so it has been a while. But I am seeing new signs of another unconfirmed Google search algorithm ranking update today, around June 6th.


I am seeing signs of another unconfirmed Google search ranking algorithm update, this one kicking off on May 22nd and continuing over the next few days. This one is unusual in that I see significant chatter amongst the SEO community, but some of the more popular Google rank-checking tools are not picking up on it.


For the past couple of days or so, maybe starting as early as May 16, 2023 through today, May 18, 2023, I am seeing significant signs of another unconfirmed Google search ranking algorithm update.


I am seeing signs of another Google search algorithm ranking update touching down over the past couple of days, which is why I am naming it the Google I/O Search Algorithm Ranking Update. This is not confirmed by Google but both SEO chatter and the automated tracking tools all show signs of an update.


Earlier this week, we reported on an unconfirmed Google search ranking update on May 1st and 2nd. Well, throughout the week, things have heated up a lot more, and we are seeing more volatility reported by the tools and more SEO chatter within the community.


Over the past couple of days, I have been seeing signs of a possible Google search ranking algorithm update. It may have started on May 1st, with the chatter within the SEO community growing throughout yesterday, May 2nd. I don't think this is the residue from the April 2023 reviews update that officially completed on April 25 - but who really knows?


On April 12th at noon, while I was offline, Google released the April 2023 reviews update that expanded the product reviews update to go beyond just products and also impacted services and things. It has been just under a week since it launched, and so far, while the sites that did see an impact saw a significant impact, I am not seeing massive widespread impacts like you would see from a core update.


On the heels of the March Broad Core Update rolling out, Google is now rolling out the April 2023 Reviews Update. And you’re reading that correctly... “Product” has been removed from the name now that the system covers “reviews about products, services, and things”.


The Google March 2023 Broad Core update finished rolling out yesterday morning at about 10:30 am ET. It took 13 days to roll out, kicking off on March 15th at 10:30 am ET and completing on March 28th at 10:30 am ET.


As you know, Google has started to roll out the Google March 2023 Broad Core update on March 15th, it should probably continue to roll out through the first half of next week and complete. But like most Google updates, we see tremors and fluctuations during (and sometimes after) the roll out.

Google March 2023 Core Update Is Live - March 15th

Google Search has started to roll out the first broad core update of the 2023 year, and this one is named the March 2023 broad core update. It began on March 15, 2023, at about 10:30 am ET and can take about two weeks to roll out, Google wrote. This update touched down fast and hard - it is a big one...

I am seeing signs of another Google search ranking algorithm update just a few days after the February 4th Google search ranking update - both of these have not been confirmed by Google. This February 8th and 9th Google update may be even stronger than the previous update.

Google's Helpful Content & Link Spam Updates Done Rolling Out On January 12th (Confirmed)

After a long slow, and paused rollout, Google has said that both the December 2022 helpful content update and December 2022 link spam update are now both rolling out. Google said both completed rolling out on Thursday, January 12, 2023.

2022 Updates

Google Unleashes December 2022 Link Spam Update With SpamBrain AI

Google began rolling out a revised link spam update on December 14, 2022, named the December 2022 link spam update. This update is new in that it uses SpamBrain AI to "detect both sites buying links, and sites used for the purpose of passing outgoing links," and not just "detect spam directly," Google said.

The update will take up to two weeks to roll out and started rolling out a week after Google started the December 2022 helpful content update, which is not yet done rolling out. The previous link spam update was in July 2021, as an FYI.

Google Rolls Out December 2022 Helpful Content Update

Google has officially confirmed the launch of the second release of the Google helpful content update/system. It started lightly on December 5th but became noticeable, according to Google, on December 6th, which is why Google did not announce it until the 6th. This update adds new signals, most notably making it work for all languages globally - it is not just looking at English content anymore.

Large Google Search Ranking Algorithm Updates & Volatility Continues

Every Monday, I end up covering an unconfirmed Google search ranking algorithm update but this past week, going into the weekend, was even more volatile than the others. I am seeing way more chatter, and even the tools are showing heavier volatility than the normal high volatility.

Another Weekend Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update - November 11th - 12th - Unconfirmed

It seems as if I see more volatility signals on the weekends with Google Search than I do during the weekdays. We may have had another Google search ranking algorithm update, unconfirmed, this weekend, around November 11th and 12th

Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update November 4th and 5th - Unconfirmed

Google has been busy, on Friday morning, November 4th, I began to see new signals of another Google search ranking algorithm update. Over the next 24 hours, those signals escalated and while Google has not confirmed there was an update, there are for sure signs that there was a Google search update.

The update also seems pretty significant, with a nice amount of chatter and the tracking tools, at least most of them, showing big spikes on the 4th and 5th of November.

September 2022 Product Reviews Update — September 20, 2022 (Confirmed)

Google released its fifth Product Reviews Update, lasting until September 26th. This update completely overlapped the September Core Update. Ranking flux across both updates peaked at 94.7° on September 21st, wrapping up a tumultuous month.

  • Google releases September 2022 product reviews update (SEL)
  • What We're Seeing From The Google Product Reviews Update #5 (SER)

September 2022 Core Update — September 12, 2022 (Confirmed)

The second Core Update of 2022 rolled out on the heels of the Helpful Content Update, complicating any attempts at analysis. The update officially lasted until September 26th, but ranking flux spiked early, with MozCast measuring 94.0° on September 12th.

  • Winners & Losers of the September 2022 Core Update & Product Reviews Update (Amsive)
  • Google's September 2022 core update hit fast but was less significant than previous updates (SEL)

Helpful Content Update —  August 25, 2022 (Confirmed)

The Helpful Content Update aimed to reward "people-first" content and devalue content written primarily for SEO. It officially rolled out over two weeks (wrapping up on September 9th), with an unusual pre-announcement just one week in advance. There were no clear signs of broad impact.

  • What creators should know about Google's helpful content update (Google)
  • How Helpful Was the Helpful Content Update? (Moz)
  • Google's a helpful content update: A critical recap (SEL)

Data Center Outage —  August 9, 2022 (Confirmed)

An accident at a Google data center in Council Bluffs, Iowa may have resulted in massive ranking fluctuations, with MozCast hitting a historical high of 123.6°F. In some cases, searchers could not access results at all. Search results appeared to normalize the next day.

  • Google Search outage causing major issues with search quality and indexing (SEL)
  • Google data center has an electrical explosion, causing injuries (CBS)

July 2022 Product Reviews Update — July 27, 2022 (Confirmed)

Google's fourth Product Reviews Update (PRU) rolled out over a week, wrapping up on August 2nd. Ranking flux on MozCast peaked at 98.8° on the last day of the update. There were no details from Google on how this update differed from the previous three PRUs.

  • Google releases July 2022 product reviews update (SEL)
  • Google July 2022 product reviews update is finished rolling out (SEL)

Unnamed Update — July 8, 2022 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast measured high volatility on both July 8th (103.9°) and July 6th (101.9°). While some SEOs and rank-tracking tools observed major changes during this period, Google did not confirm an update, and no clear details emerged.

  • Google Search Ranking Update Volatility July 5th & July 7th (SER)

Unnamed Update — June 27, 2022 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast spiked at 109.0° on June 27th, measuring unusually high-ranking flux even for a historically high-activity summer. Google provided no details nor confirmation, and the nature of the update remains unclear.

  • Google Search Ranking Update Brewing Again June 27-28th (SER)

May 2022 Core Update — May 25, 2022 (Confirmed)

On May 25th, Google announced the rollout of a core update. The rollout lasted roughly 2 weeks and was completed on June 9th. MozCast recorded peak ranking flux at 103.0°F on May 25th, the first day of the rollout. As with most Core Updates, Google did not provide specifics.

  • Google May 2022 Core Update (Google)
  • Google May 2022 Broad Core Update Is Life - What We Are Seeing Now (SER)

March 2022 Product Reviews Update — March 23, 2022 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed significant product reviews update and changed the naming convention to match the Core Updates. The update officially took 19 days to roll out, starting on March 23rd, and built on previous product review updates to identify high-quality product reviews.

  • Google releases March 2022 product reviews update with additional ranking criteria (SEL)
  • Google March 2022 product reviews update is finished rolling out (SEL)

Unnamed Update — March 18, 2022 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple SERP trackers picked up high flux around March 18-19, with MozCast peaking at 101.1°F on March 18th. No update was officially confirmed, and Danny Sullivan of Google tweeted that "I did check, no one knows of any broad, major update."

  • Spring 2022 Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update (SER)

Page Experience Update (Desktop) — February 22, 2022 (Confirmed)

Google announced that the Page Experience Update previously released on mobile SERPs would be rolled out to the desktop. This rollout officially occurred from February 22nd to March 3rd. MozCast peaked at 99.4°F on March 3rd and 98.8°F on February 23rd.

  • Google page experience update for desktop now rolling out (SEL)
  • Google page experience update for desktop done rolling out (SEL)

Unnamed Update — February 5, 2022 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast measured a historically high-ranking flux of 105.4°F on February 5th, with a possible aftershock of 102.5°F on February 7th. Some other flux trackers picked up similar spikes, but no update was officially confirmed.

  • Some Google Algorithm Tracking Tools Are Reporting an Update but Results Are Mixed (SER)

Unnamed Update — January 10, 2022 (Unconfirmed)

During a period of relatively high volatility, MozCast recorded a temperature spike of 102.1°F on January 10th. No Google update was confirmed, but industry chatter picked up ranking changes on January 11th.

  • Google Search Ranking Update On January 11th (SER)

2021 Updates

Unnamed Update — December 17, 2021 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast measured very high volatility, peaking at 105.0°F, just two days after recording a temperature of 101.3°F. While Google did not confirm these specific dates, both events occurred during the December 1-21 rollout of the Product Reviews Update.

  • Google December 2021 product reviews update is finished rolling out (SEL)

Top Stories Redesign — December 6, 2021 (Confirmed)

While not a traditional algorithm update, Google released a major overhaul to the design of Top Stories, splitting it into two columns on the desktop and (in many cases) dramatically increasing the amount of SERP real estate occupied by news results.

  • Google rolling out new Top stories design on desktop (SEL)

Product Reviews Update — December 1, 2021 (Confirmed)

On December 1, Google announced another update to reward high-quality product reviews (and a refresh of the April 2021 update). This update reportedly rolled out over three weeks, and MozCast recorded multiple days of high SERP volatility in December.

  • Google December 2021 product reviews update is rolling out now (SEL)
  • Product reviews update and your site (Google)
  • Google’s December 2021 Product Reviews Update – Analysis and Findings (GSQi)

November 2021 Core Update — November 17, 2021 (Confirmed)

On November 17, Google announced the rollout of a core update. While this update officially wrapped up at the end of November, most tracking sites showed a strong single-day spike (with MozCast hitting 101.7°F on November 17). The overlap with Black Friday sparked controversy in the SEO community.

  • Google November 2021 Core Update rolling out today (SEL)
  • Google’s November 2021 core update hit fast and hard (SEL)

November 2021 Spam Update  —  November 3, 2021 (Confirmed)

Google announced another broad spam update, which rolled out over about 8 days. MozCast peaked at 96.9°F on November 2nd. Unlike the July update, Google did not specifically call this a "link spam" update and did not provide much detail about the sites and tactics targeted.

  • Google releases November 2021 spam update (SEL)
  • Google November spam update is fully rolled out (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  October 2, 2021 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast measured two days of high flux on October 1-2, peaking at 100.9°F on October 2nd. Multiple tools and SEOs observed major ranking changes, but Google did not confirm this update and no explanation has been reported.

  • Huge Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update On October 2nd & 3rd (SER)

Page Title Rewrites  —  August 16, 2021 (Confirmed)

Starting around August 16, SEOs began to notice a substantial increase in Google rewriting page titles in SERPs. Google later confirmed this change (but not the exact date), and, after many complaints about result quality issues, scaled back some of the changes in September.

  • An update to how we generate web page titles (Google)
  • 9.5 Ways Google Rewrites Your Title Tags (Moz)
  • Google is Rewriting Title Tags in SERPs (SEJ)

July 2021 Link Spam Update  —  July 28, 2021 (Confirmed)

Google announced a link spam update that reportedly rolled out over 2-4 weeks. According to Google, this was a broad algorithm update across multiple languages. MozCast showed heavy flux on July 28, spiking at 100.3°F.

  • Google Search link spam update rolling out now (SEL)
  • A reminder on qualifying links and our link spam update (Google)

July 2021 Core Update  —  July 1, 2021 (Confirmed)

A follow-up to the June Core Update, the July 2021 Core Update rolled out from July 1-12. Peak volatility on MozCast hit 102.7°F on July 1st, but we saw temperatures in the 90s on July 5th, 8th, and 11th. Like most Core Updates, Google was light on specifics.

  • Google July 2021 core update rolling out now (SEL)
  • Google July 2021 core update is finished rolling out (SEL)

Page Experience Update  —  June 25, 2021 (Confirmed)

After multiple delays, Google started rolling out the Page Experience Update on June 25th, announcing that the rollout would continue through August 2021. This update included Core Web Vitals and impacted both organic results and News results (including Top Stories).

  • More time, tools, and details on the page experience update (Google)
  • Google page experience update now slowly rolling out (SEL)

Spam Updates  —  June 23, 2021 (Confirmed)

Google released two spam updates, on June 23rd and June 28th. It was unclear how the two updates were connected or what specifically was impacted. While specific sites showed significant impacts, there was no clear impact on overall rankings volatility.

  • Google Search releases spam update on June 23 (SEL)
  • Part two of Google Search spam update on June 28 rolling out (SEL)

June 2021 Core Update  —  June 2, 2021 (Confirmed)

In an unprecedented move, Google simultaneously announced the (apparently connected) June and July 2021 Core Updates. The June Core Update reportedly rolled out from June 2-12, peaking in MozCast at a temperature of 107.3°F on June 3rd.

  • Google Core Update June/July 2021: All the info on Google’s summer updates (Searchmetrics)
  • Google June 2021 core update finished rolling out June 12th (SEL)

Product Reviews Update  —  April 8, 2021 (Confirmed)

Google announced an update to reward in-depth reviews over thin reviews and spammy affiliates (impacting the English language only at launch). While the update seemed focused on review quality, the exact factors involved appear to be complex.

  • What creators should know about Google’s product reviews update (Google)
  • Google’s Product Reviews Algorithm Update: Winners & Losers (SEJ)

Featured Snippet Recovery  —  March 12, 2021 (Unconfirmed)

Three weeks after roughly 40% of Featured Snippets mysteriously disappeared from SERPs, they just as mysteriously returned to their previous levels. Google did not provide confirmation nor an explanation.

  • Featured Snippets: Not Gone, Just on Holiday (Moz)

Featured Snippet Drop  —  February 19, 2021 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast registered a 40% day-over-day drop in SERPs with Featured Snippets, their lowest point since 2015. On further inspection, these were heavily focused on short queries (especially 1-word queries) and disproportionately hit YMYL queries (health and finance).

  • Featured Snippets Drop to Historic Lows (Moz)
  • Google Search may be showing featured snippets less often (SEL)

Passage Indexing (US/English)  —  February 10, 2021 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out so-called "passage indexing" (which is probably closer to passage ranking) for US/English queries. While we measured two days of moderate rankings flux, it was unclear exactly how the update impacted SERPs. Google initially estimated this update would impact 7% of queries.

  • Google passage ranking now live in US English search results (SEL)
  • How AI is powering a more helpful Google (Google)

2020 Updates

Unnamed Update  —  December 17, 2020 (Unconfirmed)

One day after Google announced the end of the December Core Update rollout, MozCast measured moderately-high rankings flux at 99°F. It was unclear whether this was the last hurrah of that rollout or a separate, medium-sized algorithm update.

  • Google December 2020 Core Update Is Complete (SER)

December 2020 Core Update  —  December 3, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google announced a Core Update that appeared to roll out quickly, with the bulk of the impact hitting on December 3rd. MozCast hit 112°F, on par with the March 2020 Core Update and August 2018 "Medic" Update. Some sites reported reversals a few days later, but this seems to have been limited.

  • Google's December 2020 Core Update: By the Numbers (Moz)
  • 1,000+ Winners and Losers of the December 2020 Google Core Algorithm Update (Path Interactive)
  • The Themes Running Through The December 2020 Core Update (Rank Ranger)

Indexing Bug, Pt. 2  —  October 12, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google claimed that the bulk of the indexing and canonicalization bug(s) had been fixed by around October 14th. MozCast measured a drop in indexed pages and a temperature of 104°F around October 12th, with temperatures in the 90s lasting for a few days after.

  • Is There A Google Search Ranking Update Or More Indexing Issues & Fixes? (SER)

Indexing Bug, Pt. 1  —  September 29, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed an indexing and canonicalization bug starting in early September. MozCast measured temperatures of 99°F on September 29th and 30th, and detected dips in indexed pages on September 23rd and 29th.

  • Pages Dropping Out Of Google's Index With More Google Ranking Fluctuations? (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  August 15, 2020 (Unconfirmed)

Rank tracking tools and webmaster chatter suggested a significant update, with MozCast measuring 101°F, but no update was confirmed by Google. Some industry analysts suggested the changes were rolled back the next day and may have been temporary.

  • August 15th - Another Possible Big Google Search Algorithm & Ranking Update (SER)

Google Glitch  —  August 10, 2020 (Confirmed)

SEOs reported massive ranking changes for a few hours on August 10, which then seemed to disappear. Google later confirmed a glitch in their indexing systems. MozCast registered 97°F the following day (August 11), but it's unclear if this event was related.

  • A Google Search bug wreaked havoc on the search results Monday night (SEL)
  • Google Search bug caused by an issue with its ‘indexing systems’ (SEL)

Google Bug Fix  —  June 22, 2020 (Unconfirmed)

Rank-tracking tools showed heavy flux, with MozCast reaching 96°F. While no algorithm update was confirmed, a Google rep confirmed an indexing bug affecting Disqus comments that would be fixed during this time period.

  • A Big Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update Happening Now? (SER)
  • User Comments And The Difference Between Indexable And Indexed (GSQi)

May 2020 Core Update  —  May 4, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google announced another Core Update (the second of 2020), which caused heavy rankings flux from about May 4-6. Peaking at 113°, it measured on MozCast as the second-highest Core Update after the August 2018 "Medic" update.

  • Google May 2020 Core Update rolling out (SEL)
  • Google's May 2020 Core Update: Winners, Winlosers, and Why It's All Probably Crap (Moz)

COVID-19 Pandemic  —  March 11, 2020 (Unconfirmed)

While not an algorithm update, per se, COVID-19 dramatically shifted consumer search behavior. The WHO pandemic declaration on March 11th seemed to be a pivotal turning point. In March on MozCast, 16 out of 31 days topped 90°F, and rankings were in high flux well into April and May.

  • What SEOs can learn from COVID rankings volatility (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  February 7, 2020 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple tools registered very high ranking flux for a few days (MozCast peaked at 116° on February 7th). Google reps said that this was not a Core Update, and some data sets showed these changes reversing around February 12th.

  • Unconfirmed Google Search ranking update feels big (SEL)
  • February 2020 Google Algorithm Update: Some Big Losers & Winners (seoClarity)

Featured Snippet De-duping  —  January 22, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google announced that URLs in Featured Snippets would no longer be appearing as traditional organic results, in line with Google's philosophy that a Featured Snippet is a promoted organic result. This had significant implications for rank-tracking and organic CTR.

  • Position Zero Is Dead; Long Live Position Zero (Moz)
  • Google’s Featured Snippet-Apocalypse, FAQ Schema, No Snippet & Max Snippets Tags

January 2020 Core Update  —  January 13, 2020 (Confirmed)

Google rolled another core update, with MozCast showing heavy flux across three days and a high temperature of 97°F, in line with the previous three core updates (but smaller than the August 2018 "Medic" core update).

  • Google's January 2020 Core Update: Has the Dust Settled? (Moz)
  • Google January 2020 core update almost done rolling out (SEL)

2019 Updates

International BERT Rollout  —  December 9, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed that the BERT natural language processing algorithm was rolling out internationally, in 70 languages. This announcement came after speculation from the SEO community, and the exact timing of the roll-out is unclear.

  • BERT is rolling out to Google search in over 70 languages (SEL)

BERT Update  —  October 22, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google upgraded its algorithm and underlying hardware to support the BERT natural language processing (NLP) model. BERT helps Google better interpret natural language searches and understand the context.

  • Understanding searches better than ever before (Google)
  • What Is BERT? - Whiteboard Friday (Moz)

Unnamed Update  —  October 2, 2019 (Unconfirmed)

SERP trackers registered multiple days of ranking flux, with MozCast showing early signs on October 2 and peaking at 98°F on October 4. Google did not confirm an update, and no details were forthcoming.

  • Possible Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update On October 3rd (SER)

September 2019 Core Update  —  September 24, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out another core update. The update measured at 97°F on MozCast (fairly high, but not historically high) and seemed to impact sites affected by previous core updates. Google did not provide many details.

  • Google September 2019 core update to roll out later today (SEL)
  • The September 2019 Google Core Update – Case studies ... (GSQi)

"Maverick" Update  —  July 12, 2019 (Unconfirmed)

Ranking trackers and webmaster chatter registered a week of heavy flux (MozCast peaked at 95°F on July 16) that was later dubbed the "Maverick" update by the search community. Google did not confirm an update, and details were limited.

  • Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update Again: Update Maverick (SER)
  • Unconfirmed "Maverick" Google Algorithm Update: July 2019 (Performics)

Site Diversity Update  —  June 6, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google pre-announced a "site diversity" update, claiming it would improve situations where sites had more than two organic listings. Moz data showed that, while the update did marginally improve SERPs with 3-5 duplicate sites on page one, the impact was relatively small.

  • Did Google's Site Diversity Update Live Up to its Promise? (Moz)
  • Google search update aims to show more diverse results from different domain names (SEL)

June 2019 Core Update  —  June 3, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google pre-announced a "core" update, but with limited details. Sites impacted in previous core updates seem to have been affected, in some cases, and some major UK publishers reported heavy losses. On average, the impact was smaller than the August "Medic" update, as measured by MozCast.

  • Early data around the Google June 2019 core update shows some winners, losers (SEL)
  • The June 3, 2019 Core Quality Update was a big one (Marie Haynes)

Indexing Bugs  —  May 23, 2019 (Confirmed)

Two days in a row, Google confirmed indexing bugs. The first bug reportedly was preventing new content from being properly indexed. MozCast confirmed unusually high SERP flux from May 23-25 (peaking on the 23rd), but it's unclear if this was directly related to the bugs.

  • Google has fixed the indexing issue from Thursday night (SEL)

Deindexing Bug  —  April 5, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a bug that dropped pages from the search index around the weekend of April 5th. Moz data suggested drops on April 5th and 7th, with about 4% of stable URLs falling off of page one. Most sites recovered soon after.

  • How Bad Was Google's Deindexing Bug? (Moz)
  • Google says the de-indexing issue is fixed (SEL)

March 2019 Core Update  —  March 12, 2019 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a "core" update, stating it was the third major core update since they began using that label. MozCast hit a peak of 101.2°F, a bit below March 1st temperatures. No specific details were given about the nature of the update.

  • Google released a broad core search algorithm on March 12 (SEL)
  • Google Names The 3/12 Update The "March 2019 Core Update" (SER)

19-result SERPs  —  March 1, 2019 (Unconfirmed)

For one day, Google showed anomalous page-1 counts, with up to 19 organic results. These appeared to be related to In-depth Articles, which disappeared entirely on March 6. MozCast reached 108.2°F, but it's unclear how much of this was due to the temporary boost in organic counts.

  • March 1st Google Update: The Mysterious Case of the 19-Result SERPs (Moz)
  • March 1st Google Search Algorithm Ranking Update - Unconfirmed (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  February 6, 2019 (Unconfirmed)

After a relatively quiet December and January, tracking tools detected heavy ranking flux, with MozCast reaching 103.4°F.

  • Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update Happening Today? (SER)

2018 Updates

Unnamed Update  —  November 29, 2018  (Unconfirmed)

MozCast hit 103.1°F, and webmaster chatter and other tracking tools indicated high algorithm flux. Google did not confirm.

  • Google Search Algorithm Update Hits Friday, November 30th? (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  October 15, 2018 (Unconfirmed)

Tracking tools and webmaster chatter indicated heavy algorithm flux, and MozCast spiked to 109.7°F. No confirmation from Google.

  • October 16, 2018, Google Search Algorithm Update (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  September 10, 2018 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast temperatures hit 107.6°F, and webmaster chatter around an update spiked, but Google would not confirm any significant changes.

  • Google Algorithm Update On September 11th (SER)

"Medic" Core Update  —  August 1, 2018 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a "broad core algorithm update," with wide reports of massive impact. It rolled out over the period of about a week but peaked on August 1-2. This update seemed to disproportionately affect sites in the health and wellness vertical, although the large-scale impact was seen in all verticals.

  • Google's August 1st Core Update: Week 1 (Moz)
  • Google Medic Update: Google's Core Search Update Had Big Impact On Health/Medical Sites (SER)
  • The August 1, 2018, Google Update strongly affected YMYL sites (MarieHaynes.com)

Chrome Security Warnings (Full Site)  —  July 24, 2018 (Confirmed)

After warning users of unsecured (non-HTTPS) forms months earlier, Chrome 68 began marking all non-HTTPS sites as "not secure." The changes rolled out on July 24, but rely on users installing the latest Chrome version, which can take weeks or months.

  • A milestone for Chrome security: marking HTTP as “not secure” (Google)
  • Chrome starts telling users HTTP sites are not secure (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  July 21, 2018 (Unconfirmed)

Algorithm trackers and webmaster chatter signaled heavy rankings flux, but Google did not confirm. MozCast recorded its highest temperature in 2018 at 114°F.

  • Google Search Algorithm Update Saturday, July 21st? (SER)

Mobile Speed Update  —  July 9, 2018 (Confirmed)

Six months after announcing it, Google rolled out the mobile page speed update, making page speed a ranking factor for mobile results. Google claimed that this only affected the slowest mobile sites, and there was no evidence of major mobile rankings shifts.

  • Using page speed in mobile search ranking (Google)
  • It's Live: Google Speed Update Now Rolling Out (SER)

Video Carousels  —  June 14, 2018 (Confirmed)

Google moved videos from organic-like results with thumbnails into a dedicated video carousel, causing a shake-up in results that were previously tracked as organic. At the same time, the number of SERPs with videos increased significantly (+60% in MozCast).

  • Google Is Replacing Video Thumbnails with A Desktop Carousel (RankRanger)
  • Trapped In Google’s New Video Carousels – A Dangerous SERP Feature For Some Ecommerce Retailers (GSQi)

Unnamed Update  —  May 23, 2018 (Unconfirmed)

Algorithm tracking tools and webmaster chatter showed heavy activity, but Google did not confirm an update. MozCast showed very high temperatures over a 3-day period, peaking on May 23.

  • Is Another Google Update Happening In May? (SER)

Snippet Length Drop  —  May 13, 2018  (Confirmed)

After testing longer display snippets of up to 300+ characters for a few months, Google rolled back most snippets to the former limit (about 150-160 characters).

  • Google confirms it shortened search results snippets after expanding them last December (SEL)
  • How to Write Meta Descriptions in a Constantly Changing World (Moz)

Unnamed Core Update  —  April 17, 2018 (Confirmed)

MozCast picked up heavy algorithm flux that peaked on April 17 and continued for over a week. Google later confirmed a "core" update but didn't provide any specifics and the update wasn't named by Google or the SEO community.

  • Google confirms rolling out a broad core search algorithm update earlier this week (SEL)
  • Google Ranking Algorithm Update Continues On For Over A Week (SER)

Mobile-First Index Rollout  —  March 26, 2018 (Confirmed)

Google announced that the mobile-first index was finally "rolling out." Since the index has been in testing for many months, and Google has suggested they are migrating sites gradually, it's unclear how much impact this specific roll-out had on the overall index. The webmaster should begin to see notifications within Google Search Console.

  • Rolling out mobile-first indexing (Google)
  • Google begins rolling out mobile-first indexing to more sites (SEL)

Zero-result SERP Test  —  March 14, 2018 (Confirmed)

On a small set of Knowledge Cards, including some time/date queries and unit conversion calculators, Google started displaying zero organic results and a "Show all results" button. A week later, Google stopped this test, but we believe it is an important sign of things to come.

  • Zero-Result SERPs: Welcome to the Future We Should've Known Was Coming (Moz)
  • In-Depth Look at Google’s New Zero Result Search Results (SEM Post)

"Brackets" Core Update  —  March 8, 2018 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a "core" update on March 7th, but volatility spiked as early as March 4th, with a second spike on March 8th, and continued for almost two weeks. This may have been multiple updates or one prolonged, rolling update. The "Brackets" name was coined by Glenn Gabe; no details were provided by Google.

  • The Brackets Update – Analysis and Findings From The March 7, 2018 Google Algorithm Update (GSQi)
  • Google Confirmed Weekend Algorithm Ranking Shift As "Core Update" (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  February 20, 2018 (Unconfirmed)

Rankings showed a spike in volatility (across a number of tools) around February 20th, which quickly settled down, sometimes signaling a targeted algorithm update. Google did not confirm any update in this time period.

  • Google Algorithm Update Chatter & Signals February 20th (SER)

2017 Updates

"Maccabees" Update  —  December 14, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

Chatter and several tools showed ranking volatility around December 14th. Barry Schwartz named this the "Maccabees" update, but Google would only confirm that several small updates had happened in the general timeline. Pre-holiday updates tend to get more attention (and are generally rarer) due to their disruptive effect on e-commerce.

  • Google Search Ranking Algorithm Update: The Maccabees Update (SER)
  • Google confirms mid-December search ranking algorithm updates (SEL)

Snippet Length Increase  —  November 30, 2017 (Confirmed)

After testing longer search snippets for over two years, Google increased them across a large number of results. This led us to adopt a new Meta Description limit -- up to 300 characters from the previous 155 (almost doubling). Google confirmed an update on how snippets are handled but didn't provide details.

  • How Long Should Your Meta Description Be? -- 2018 Edition (Moz)
  • Google officially increases the length of snippets in search results (SEL)
  • Google Shuffles Global SERP Feature Trends (RankRanger)

Unnamed Update  —  November 14, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

Algorithm trackers and webmaster chatter detected a high amount of flux, peaking (in our data) around November 15. Google did not confirm an official update.

  • Mid-November Google Algorithm Search Ranking Update (SER)

Featured Snippet Drop  —  October 27, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

Over a period of a few days from October 27-31, there was a substantial drop in Featured Snippets. This co-occurred with a jump in Knowledge Panels, as Google seemed to add many panels for broad terms and objects ("travel", "toilet", "web design", etc.). Some of these panels disappeared around December 15.

  • Knowledge Graph Eats Featured Snippets, Jumps +30% (Moz)
  • Is the featured snippet bubble bursting? (SEL)

Chrome Security Warnings (Forms)  —  October 17, 2017 (Confirmed)

With the launch of Chrome 62, Google started warning visitors to sites with unsecured forms. While not an algorithm update, this was an important step in Google's push toward HTTPS and may have a material impact on site traffic.

  • Next steps toward more connection security (Chromium)
  • Google emails warnings to webmasters that Chrome will mark http pages with forms as ‘not secure’ (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  September 27, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

Algorithm trackers (including MozCast) and webmaster chatter spotted increasing flux starting around September 25th, which seemed to spike on the 27th, after a period of relative calm. No update was officially confirmed.

  • More Google Algorithm & Search Results Shuffling (SER)

Google Jobs  —  June 20, 2017 (Confirmed)

Google officially launched its jobs portal, including a stand-alone 3-pack of job listings in search results. These results drew data from almost all of the major providers, including LinkedIn, Monster, Glassdoor, and CareerBuilder.

  • Connect to job seekers with Google Search (Google)
  • Google launches its AI-powered jobs search engine (TechCrunch)

Unnamed Update  —  May 17, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast and other tools tracked a massive, multi-day spike that kicked off around May 17th. This preceded a sustained period of high algorithmic flux that may not have settled down for months.

  • Was There A Google Algorithm Update Starting On Wednesday? (SER)
  • The May 17, 2017 Google Algorithm Update (GSQi)
  • Google Search Ranking & Algorithm Shifts Still Underway (SER)

Google Tops 50% HTTPS  —  April 16, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

According to our MozCast 10K tracking set, half of page-1 Google organic results were secure/HTTPs as of mid-April. This increased to close to 75% by the end of 2017.

  • Half of Page-1 Google Results Are Now HTTPS (Moz)

"Fred" (Unconfirmed)  —  March 8, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

Google rolled out what appeared to be a major update, with reports of widespread impacts across the SEO community. Gary Illyes jokingly referred to is as "Fred", and the name stuck, but he later made it clear that this was not an official confirmation.

  • New, unconfirmed Google ranking update ‘Fred’ shakes the SEO world (SEL)
  • Did Google’s Fred update hit low-value content sites that focus on revenue, not users? (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  February 6, 2017 (Confirmed)

Algorithm changes beginning on February 1st continued for a full week, peaking around February 6th (some reported the 7th). Webmaster chatter and industry case studies suggest these were separate events.

  • February 7, 2017, Google Algorithm Update – Analysis and Findings From A Significant Core Ranking Update (GSQi)
  • February 7th Google Algorithm Update Was Big (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  February 1, 2017 (Unconfirmed)

There was a period of heavy algorithm flux starting around February 1st and peaking around February 6th. It is unclear whether this was multiple algorithm updates or a single update with an extended roll-out, but anecdotal evidence suggests at least two updates.

  • An unconfirmed Google algorithm update may be better at discounting links and spam (SEL)

Intrusive Interstitial Penalty  —  January 10, 2017 (Confirmed)

Google started rolling out a penalty to punish aggressive interstitials and pop-ups that might damage the mobile user experience. Google also provided a rare warning of this update five months in advance. MozCast showed high temperatures from January 10-11, but many SEOs reported minimal impact on sites that should have been affected.

  • Google warns it will crack down on “intrusive interstitials” in January (SEL)
  • Official: Google Intrusive Interstitials Mobile Penalty Now Rolling Out (SER)

2016 Updates

Unnamed Update  —  December 14, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple Google trackers showed massive flux around December 14-15, including a rare MozCast temperature of 109°F. Webmaster chatter was heavy as well, but Google did not confirm an update.

  • December 15th Google Search Algorithm Update Signals (SER)

Unnamed Update  —  November 10, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast detected a major (106°) spike on November 10th and another on the 18th. Industry chatter was high during both periods, with some suggesting that the second spike was a reversal of the first update. Google has not confirmed either event. Many people reported bad dates in SERPs during the same time period, but it's unclear whether this was causal or just a coincidence.

  • November 10, 2016, Google Algorithm Update – Was It A Core Ranking Update, The Mobile-first Index Being Tested, or Both? (GSQi)
  • Was There A Google Search Update On November 10th? (SER)

Penguin 4.0, Phase 2  —  October 6, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

The second phase of Penguin 4.0 was the reversal of all previous Penguin penalties. This seemed to happen after the new code rolled out, and may have taken as long as two weeks. Post-Penguin activity had one final peak on October 6th (116°), but it is unclear whether this was Penguin or a new update. Algorithm temperatures finally started to drop after October 6th.

Penguin 4.0, Phase 1  —  September 27, 2016 (Confirmed)

The first phase of Penguin 4.0, which probably launched around September 22-23, was the rollout of the new, "gentler" Penguin algorithm, which devalues bad links instead of penalizing sites. The exact timeline is unconfirmed, but we believe this rollout took at least a few days to fully update and may have corresponded to an algorithm temperature spike (113°) on September 27th.

  • Why Didn't You Recover from Penguin? (Moz)

Penguin 4.0 Announcement  —  September 23, 2016 (Confirmed)

After almost two years of waiting, Google finally announced a major Penguin update. They suggested the new Penguin is now real-time and baked into the "core" algorithm. Initial impact assessments were small, but it was later revealed that the Penguin 4.0 rollout was unusually long and multi-phase (see September 27th and October 6th).

  • Penguin is now part of our core algorithm (Google)
  • Google updates Penguin, says it now runs in real-time within the core search algorithm (SEL)

Image/Universal Drop  —  September 13, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast recorded a nearly-record 111° temperature and a 50% drop in SERPs with image (universal/vertical) results. The universal result shake-up opened up an organic position on page 1, causing substantial ranking shifts, but it's likely that this was part of a much larger update.

  • Penguin 4.0: Was It Worth the Wait? (Moz)

"Possum"  —  September 1, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

While unconfirmed by Google, MozCast recorded extreme temperatures of 108° and a drop in local pack prevalence, and the local SEO community noted a major shake-up in pack results. Data suggests this update (or a simultaneous update) also heavily impacted organic results.

  • Everything you need to know about Google’s ‘Possum’ algorithm update (SEL)
  • Is a big Google search update happening? Chatter thinks so. (SEL)

Mobile-friendly 2  —  May 12, 2016 (Confirmed)

Just more than a year after the original "mobile-friendly" update, Google rolled out another ranking signal boost to benefit mobile-friendly sites on mobile search. Since the majority of sites we track are already mobile-friendly, it's likely the impact of the latest update was small.

  • Google’s mobile-friendly algorithm boost has rolled out (SEL)
  • Continuing to make the web more mobile-friendly (Google)

Unnamed Update  —  May 10, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast and other Google weather trackers showed a historically rare week-long pattern of algorithm activity, including a 97-degree spike. Google would not confirm this update, and no explanation is currently available.

  • Google Dismisses Any Recent Major Algorithm Update (SER)

AdWords Shake-up  —  February 23, 2016 (Confirmed)

Google made major changes to AdWords, removing right-column ads entirely and rolling out 4-ad top blocks on many commercial searches. While this was a paid search update, it had significant implications for CTR for both paid and organic results, especially on competitive keywords.

  • Four Ads on Top: The Wait Is Over (Moz)
  • Google AdWords Switching to 4 Ads on Top, None on Sidebar (SEM Post)

Unnamed Update  —  January 8, 2016 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple tracking tools (including MozCast) reported historically-large rankings movement, which Google later confirmed as a "core algo update". Google officially said that this was not a Penguin update, but details remain sketchy.

  • Google Confirms: Core Search Ranking Update Took Place But Not Penguin Related (SER)

2015 Updates

RankBrain*  —  October 26, 2015 (Confirmed)

Google made a major announcement, revealing that machine learning had been a part of the algorithm for months, contributing to the 3rd most influential ranking factor. *Note: This is an announcement date - we believe the actual launch was closer to spring 2015.

  • Google Turning Its Lucrative Web Search Over to AI Machines (Bloomberg)
  • FAQ: All About The New Google RankBrain Algorithm (SEL)

Panda 4.2 (#28)  —  July 17, 2015 (Confirmed)

Google announced a Panda update (most likely a data refresh), saying that it could take months to fully roll out. The immediate impact was unclear, and there were no clear signs of a major algorithm update.

  • Google Panda Update: Everything We Know About Panda 4.2 (The SEM Post)
  • Google Panda 4.2 Is Here (SEL)

The Quality Update  —  May 3, 2015 (Confirmed)

After many reports of large-scale ranking changes, originally dubbed "Phantom 2", Google acknowledged a core algorithm change impacting "quality signals". This update seems to have had a broad impact, but Google didn't reveal any specifics about the nature of the signals involved.

  • The Quality Update: Google Confirms Changing How Quality Is Assessed, Resulting In Rankings Shake-Up (SEL)
  • Google's 'phantom' algorithm update hits websites (CNBC)

Mobile Update AKA "Mobilegeddon"  —  April 22, 2015 (Confirmed)

In a rare move, Google pre-announced an algorithm update, telling us that mobile rankings would differ for mobile-friendly sites starting on April 21st. The impact of this update was, in the short-term, much smaller than expected, and our data showed that algorithm flux peaked on April 22nd.

  • Finding more mobile-friendly search results (Google)
  • 7 Days After Mobilegeddon: How Far Did the Sky Fall? (Moz)
  • Finding more mobile-friendly search results (Google)
  • 7 Days After Mobilegeddon: How Far Did the Sky Fall? (Moz)

Unnamed Update  —  February 4, 2015 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple SERP trackers and many webmasters reported major flux in Google SERPs. Speculation ranged from an e-commerce-focused update to a mobile usability update. Google did not officially confirm an update.

  • Significant Google Search Algorithm Update Yesterday (SER)
  • Google Brand-eCommerce “Update” causing fluctuations (Searchmetrics)
  • Significant Google Search Algorithm Update Yesterday (SER)
  • Google Brand-eCommerce “Update” causing fluctuations (Searchmetrics)

2014 Updates

Pigeon Expands (UK, CA, AU)  —  December 22, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google's major local algorithm update, dubbed "Pigeon", expanded to the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. The original update hit the United States in July 2014. The update was confirmed on the 22nd but may have rolled out as early as the 19th.

  • Google Pigeon Update Rolls Out To UK, Canada & Australia (SEL)
  • Local Search Results Affected as Google Pigeon Update Hits UK (Strategy Digital)

Penguin Everflux  —  December 10, 2014 (Confirmed)

A Google representative said that Penguin had shifted to continuous updates, moving away from infrequent, major updates. While the exact timeline was unclear, this claim seemed to fit ongoing flux after Penguin 3.0 (including unconfirmed claims of a Penguin 3.1).

  • Google Says Penguin To Shift To “Continuous Updates” (SEL)

Pirate 2.0  —  October 21, 2014 (Confirmed)

More than two years after the original DMCA/"Pirate" update, Google launched another update to combat software and digital media piracy. This update was highly targeted, causing dramatic drops in ranking to a relatively small group of sites.

  • Google Pirate Update Analysis and ​Loser List (Searchmetrics)
  • Google's New Search Downranking Hits Torrent Sites Hard (TorrentFreak)

Penguin 3.0  —  October 17, 2014 (Confirmed)

More than a year after the previous Penguin update (2.1), Google launched a Penguin refresh. This update appeared to be smaller than expected (<1% of US/English queries affected) and was probably data-only (not a new Penguin algorithm). The timing of the update was unclear, especially internationally, and Google claimed it was spread out over "weeks".

  • Google AutoCorrects: Penguin 3.0 Still Rolling Out & 1% Impact (SER)
  • Penguin 3.0 Analysis – Penguin Tremors, Recoveries, Fresh Hits, and Crossing Algorithms (GSQi)

"In The News" Box  —  October 1, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google made what looked like a display change to News-box results, but later announced that they had expanded news links to a much larger set of potential sites. The presence of news results in SERPs also spiked, and major news sites reported substantial traffic changes.

  • Google’s “In The News” Box Now Lists More Than Traditional News Sites (SEL)
  • New Publishers Upset With Google's "In The News" Box (SER)

Panda 4.1 (#27)  —  September 23, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google announced a significant Panda update, which included an algorithmic component. They estimated the impact at 3-5% of queries affected. Given the "slow rollout," the exact timing was unclear.

  • Panda 4.1 — Google’s 27th Panda Update — Is Rolling Out (SEL)
  • Panda 4.1 Analysis and Findings – Affiliate Marketing, Keyword Stuffing, Security Warnings, and Deception Prevalent (GSQI)

Authorship Removed  —  August 28, 2014 (Confirmed)

Following up on the June 28th drop of authorship photos, Google announced that they would be completely removing authorship markup (and would no longer process it). By the next morning, authorship bylines had disappeared from all SERPs.

  • Official Announcement from John Mueller (Google+)
  • It’s Over: The Rise & Fall Of Google Authorship For Search Results (SEL)

HTTPS/SSL Update  —  August 6, 2014 (Confirmed)

After months of speculation, Google announced that they would be giving preference to secure sites, and that adding encryption would provide a "lightweight" rankings boost. They stressed that this boost would start out small, but implied it might increase if the change proved to be positive.

  • HTTPS as a ranking signal (Google)
  • Google Starts Giving A Ranking Boost To Secure HTTPS/SSL Sites (SEL)

Pigeon  —  July 24, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google shook the local SEO world with an update that dramatically altered some local results and modified how they handle and interpret location cues. Google claimed that Pigeon created closer ties between the local algorithm and core algorithm(s).

  • Google “Pigeon” Updates Local Search Algorithm With Stronger Ties To Web Search Signal (SEL)
  • Google Updates Local Algo with More Web-Based Signals - Turmoil in SERPs (Blumenthals.com)

Authorship Photo Drop  —  June 28, 2014 (Confirmed)

John Mueller made a surprise announcement (on June 25th) that Google would be dropping all authorship photos from SERPs (after heavily promoting authorship as a connection to Google+). The drop was completed around June 28th.

  • Google Announces the End of Author Photos in Search: What You Should Know (Moz)
  • Google Removes Author Photos From Search: Why And What Does It Mean? (SEL)

Payday Loan 3.0  —  June 12, 2014 (Confirmed)

Less than a month after the Payday Loan 2.0 anti-spam update, Google launched another major iteration. Official statements suggested that 2.0 targeted specific sites, while 3.0 targeted spammy queries.

  • Google Spam Algorithm Version 3.0 Launches Today (SER)

Panda 4.0 (#26)  —  May 19, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a major Panda update that likely included both an algorithm update and a data refresh. Officially, about 7.5% of English-language queries were affected. While Matt Cutts said it began rolling out on 5/20, our data strongly suggests it started earlier.

  • Google Begins Rolling Out Panda 4.0 Now (SEL)
  • Panda 4.0, Payday Loan 2.0 & eBay's Very Bad Day (Moz)

Payday Loan 2.0  —  May 16, 2014 (Confirmed)

Just prior to Panda 4.0, Google updated it's "payday loan" algorithm, which targets especially spammy queries. The exact date of the roll-out was unclear (Google said "this past weekend" on 5/20), and the back-to-back updates made the details difficult to sort out.

  • Official: Google Payday Loan Algorithm 2.0 Launched: Targets “Very Spammy Queries” (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  March 24, 2014 (Unconfirmed)

Major algorithm flux trackers and webmaster chatter spiked around 3/24-3/25, and some speculated that the new, "softer" Panda update had arrived. Many sites reported ranking changes, but this update was never confirmed by Google.

  • Did Google Do An Algorithm Update Yesterday? (SER)
  • Did the Softer Panda Update Arrive on March 24, 2014? (GSQi)

Page Layout #3  —  February 6, 2014 (Confirmed)

Google "refreshed" its page layout algorithm, also known as "top-heavy". Originally launched in January 2012, the page layout algorithm penalizes sites with too many ads above the fold.

  • Google Updates Its Page Layout Algorithm To Go After Sites "Top Heavy" With Ads (SEL)

2013 Updates

Authorship Shake-up  —  December 19, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

As predicted by Matt Cutts at Pubcon Las Vegas, authorship markup disappeared from roughly 15% of queries over a period of about a month. The fall bottomed out around December 19th, but the numbers remain volatile and have not recovered to earlier highs.

  • Google's December Authorship Shake-up (Moz)
  • Authorshipocalypse! The Great Google Authorship Purge Has Begun (Virante)

Unnamed Update  —  December 17, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

Almost all global flux trackers registered historically high activity. Google would not confirm an update, suggesting that they avoid updates near the holidays. MozCast also registered a rise in some Partial-Match Domains (PMDs), but the patterns were unclear.

  • The Biggest SERP Flux Since Penguin 2.0 (Dejan SEO)
  • Google Denies A Major Update On December 17th (SEL)

Unnamed Update  —  November 14, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

Multiple Google trackers picked up unusual activity, which co-occurred with a report of widespread DNS errors in Google Webmaster Tools. Google did not confirm an update, and the cause and nature of this flux was unclear.

  • Was There a November 14th Google Update? (Moz)
  • Was There A Google Update On November 14th? (SER)

Penguin 2.1 (#5)  —  October 4, 2013 (Confirmed)

After a 4-1/2 month gap, Google launched another Penguin update. Given the 2.1 designation, this was probably a data update (primarily) and not a major change to the Penguin algorithm. The overall impact seemed to be moderate, although some webmasters reported being hit hard.

  • Penguin 5, With The Penguin 2.1 Spam-Filtering Algorithm, Is Now Live (SEL)
  • Google Penguin 2.1 Was A Big Hit (SER)

Hummingbird  —  August 20, 2013 (Confirmed)

Announced on September 26th, Google suggested that the "Hummingbird" update rolled out about a month earlier. Our best guess ties it to a MozCast spike on August 20th and many reports of flux from August 20-22. Hummingbird has been compared to Caffeine and seems to be a core algorithm update that may power changes to semantic search and the Knowledge Graph for months to come.

  • FAQ: All About The New Google "Hummingbird" Algorithm (SEL)
  • Some Reports Of An August 21/22 Google Update (SER)

In-depth Articles  —  August 6, 2013 (Confirmed)

Google added a new type of news result called "in-depth articles", dedicated to more evergreen, long-form content. At launch, it included links to three articles and appeared across about 3% of the searches that MozCast tracks.

  • In-depth articles in search results (Google)
  • Inside In-depth Articles: Dissecting Google's Latest Feature (Moz)

Unnamed Update  —  July 26, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

MozCast tracked a large Friday spike (105° F), with other sources showing significant activity over the weekend. Google has not confirmed this update.

  • Was There A Weekend Google Update? (SER)
  • MozCast Update (Google+)

Knowledge Graph Expansion  —  July 19, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

Seemingly overnight, queries with Knowledge Graph (KG) entries expanded by more than half (+50.4%) across the MozCast data set, with more than a quarter of all searches showing some kind of KG entry.

  • The Day the Knowledge Graph Exploded (Moz)

Panda Recovery  —  July 18, 2013 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a Panda update, but it was unclear whether this was one of the 10-day rolling updates or something new. The implication was that this was algorithmic and may have "softened" some previous Panda penalties.

  • Confirmed: Google Panda Update: The "Softer" Panda Algorithm (SER)

Multi-Week Update  —  June 27, 2013, (Confirmed)

Google's Matt Cutts tweeted a reply suggesting a "multi-week" algorithm update between roughly June 12th and "the week after July 4th". The nature of the update was unclear, but there was massive rankings volatility during that time period, peaking on June 27th (according to MozCast data). It appears that Google may have been testing some changes that were later rolled back.

  • Google's "Multi-Week" Algorithm Update (Moz)
  • Google's Matt Cutts: Multi-Week Update Rolling Out (SER)

"Payday Loan" Update  —  June 11, 2013 (Confirmed)

Google announced a targeted algorithm update to take on niches with notoriously spammy results, specifically mentioning payday loans and porn. The update was announced on June 11th, but Matt Cutts suggested it would roll out over a 1-2 month period.

  • Google Payday Loan Algorithm: Google Search Algorithm Update To Target Spammy Queries (SEL)
  • Google Spam Algorithm For Spammy Queries: Pay Day Loans+ (SER)

Panda Dance  —  June 11, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

While not an actual Panda update, Matt Cutts made an important clarification at SMX Advanced, suggesting that Panda was still updating monthly, but each update rolled out over about 10 days. This was not the "ever flux" many people had expected after Panda #25.

Google’s Panda Dance: Matt Cutts Confirms Panda Rolls Out Monthly Over 10 Of 30 Days (SEL)

Penguin 2.0 (#4)  —  May 22, 2013 (Confirmed)

After months of speculation bordering on hype, the 4th Penguin update (dubbed "2.0" by Google) arrived with only moderate impact. The exact nature of the changes were unclear, but some evidence suggested that Penguin 2.0 was more finely targeted to the page level.

  • Penguin 4, With Penguin 2.0 Generation Spam-Fighting, Is Now Live (SEL)
  • Penguin 2.0/4 - Were You Jarred and/or Jolted? (Moz)

Domain Crowding  —  May 21, 2013 (Confirmed)

Google released an update to control domain crowding/diversity deep in the SERPs (pages 2+). The timing was unclear, but it seemed to roll out just prior to Penguin 2.0 in the US and possibly the same day internationally.

  • Google Domain Clustering Update (Justin Briggs)
  • Google’s Matt Cutts: Domain Clustering To Change Again (SEL)

"Phantom"  —  May 9, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

In the period around May 9th, there were many reports of an algorithm update (also verified by high MozCast activity). The exact nature of this update was unknown, but many sites reported significant traffic loss.

  • A Google Update Is Happening (Google: Nothing To Announce Now) (SER)
  • SEO Findings From Google’s Phantom Update (GSQi)

Panda #25  —  March 14, 2013 (Unconfirmed)

Matt Cutts pre-announced a Panda update at SMX West, and suggested it would be the last update before Panda was integrated into the core algorithm. The exact date was unconfirmed, but MozCast data suggests 3/13-3/14.

  • Google's Final Manual Panda Refresh Here? #25 (SER)
  • Google Panda Update 25 Seems To Have Hit (SEL)

Panda #24  —  January 22, 2013 (Confirmed)

Google announced its first official update of 2013, claiming that 1.2% of queries were affected. This did not seem related to talk of an update around 1/17-18 (which Google did not confirm).

  • Google Announces 24th Panda Refresh; Not Related To January 17th (SER)
  • Google Panda Update Version #24; 1.2% Of Search Queries Impacted (SEL)

2012 Updates

Panda #23  —  December 21, 2012 (Confirmed)

Right before the Christmas holiday, Google rolled out another Panda update. They officially called it a "refresh", impacting 1.3% of English queries. This was a slightly higher impact than Pandas #21 and #22.

  • Confirmed: A Panda Refresh, Version #23 (SER)

Knowledge Graph Expansion  —  December 4, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google added Knowledge Graph functionality to non-English queries, including Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Japanese, Russian, and Italian. This update was "more than just translation" and added enhanced KG capabilities.

  • Get smarter answers from the Knowledge Graph from Portuguese to Japanese to Russian (Google)
  • Google’s Knowledge Graph Expands To More Languages, Including Italian, French, Japanese, And Russian (TechCrunch)

Panda #22  —  November 21, 2012 (Confirmed)

After some mixed signals, Google confirmed the 22nd Panda update, which appears to have been data-only. This came on the heels of a larger, but unnamed update around November 19th.

  • Official Google Panda #22 Update: November 21 (SER)
  • Confirmed: Google Panda Refresh #22 On November 21st; 0.8% Of Queries Impacted (SEL)

Panda #21  —  November 5, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out their 21st Panda update, roughly 5-1/2 weeks after Panda #20. This update was reported to be smaller, officially impacting 1.1% of English queries.

  • Google Releases Panda Update 21, Impacts 1.1% Of US Queries In English (SEL)
  • Official: Google Panda Refresh On November 5th (Version 21) (SER)

Page Layout #2  —  October 9, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced an update to its original page layout algorithm change back in January, which targeted pages with too many ads above the fold. It's unclear whether this was an algorithm change or a Panda-style data refresh.

  • It’s "Top Heavy 2?" As Google Rolls Out Update To Its Page Layout Algorithm (SEL)
  • Google Page Layout Algorithm Officially Updated (SER)

Penguin #3  —  October 5, 2012 (Confirmed)

After suggesting the next Penguin update would be major, Google released a minor Penguin data update, impacting "0.3% of queries". Penguin update numbering was rebooted, similar to Panda - this was the 3rd Penguin release.

  • Google Penguin Update 3 Released, Impacts 0.3% Of English-Language Queries (SEL)
  • Google Released 3rd Penguin Update: Not Jarring Or Jolting (SER)

August/September 65-Pack  —  October 4, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google published its monthly (bi-monthly?) list of search highlights. The 65 updates for August and September included 7-result SERPs, Knowledge Graph expansion, updates to how "page quality" is calculated, and changes to how local results are determined.

  • Search quality highlights: 65 changes for August and September (Google)

Panda #20  —  September 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

Overlapping the EMD update, a fairly major Panda update (algo + data) rolled out, officially affecting 2.4% of queries. As the 3.X series was getting odd, industry sources opted to start naming Panda updates in order (this was the 20th).

  • 20th Google Panda Algorithm Update: Fairly Major (SER)
  • How Do You Know If Google Panda Or EMD Hurt Your Site? (SER)

Exact-Match Domain (EMD) Update  —  September 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced a change in the way it was handling exact-match domains (EMDs). This led to large-scale devaluation, reducing the presence of EMDs in the MozCast data set by over 10%. The official word is that this change impacted 0.6% of queries (by volume).

  • Google's EMD Algo Update - Early Data (Moz)
  • The EMD Update: Google Issues “Weather Report” Of Crack Down On Low-Quality Exact Match Domains (SEL)

Panda 3.9.2 (#19)  —  September 18, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out another Panda refresh, which appears to have been data-only. Ranking flux was moderate but not on par with a large-scale algorithm update.

  • Google Rolls Out Panda 3.9.2 Refresh (SER)
  • Panda Update 3.92 Rolling Out (Or Is It Panda 20 Time?) (SEL)

Panda 3.9.1 (#18)  —  August 20, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out yet another Panda data update, but the impact seemed to be fairly small. Since the Panda 3.0 series ran out of numbers at 3.9, the new update was dubbed 3.9.1.

  • Confirmed: Google Panda 3.9.1 Update (SER)
  • Google Panda Refresh On August 19th: Version 3.9.1 (SEL)

7-Result SERPs  —  August 14, 2012 (Unconfirmed)

Google made a significant change to the Top 10, limiting it to 7 results for many queries. Our research showed that this change rolled out over a couple of days, finally impacting about 18% of the keywords we tracked.

  • SERP Crowding & Shrinkage: It's Not Your Imagination (Moz)
  • 7 Is The New 10? Google Showing Fewer Results & More From Same Domain (SEL)

June/July 86-Pack  —  August 10, 2012 (Confirmed)

After a summer hiatus, the June and July Search Quality Highlights were rolled out in one mega-post. Major updates included Panda data and algorithm refreshes, an improved rank-ordering function (?), a ranking boost for "trusted sources", and changes to site clustering.

  • Search quality highlights: 86 changes for June and July (Google)
  • Google’s June-July Updates: Site Clustering, Sitelinks Changes & Focus On Page Quality (SEL)

DMCA Penalty ("Pirate")  —  August 10, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced that they would start penalizing sites with repeat copyright violations, probably via DMCA takedown requests. The timing was stated as "starting next week" (8/13?).

  • An update to our search algorithms (Google)
  • The Emanuel Update: Google Will Penalize Sites Repeatedly Accused Of Copyright Infringement (SEL)

Panda 3.9 (#17)  —  July 24, 2012 (Confirmed)

A month after Panda 3.8, Google rolled out a new Panda update. Rankings fluctuated for 5-6 days, although no single day was high enough to stand out. Google claimed ~1% of queries were impacted.

  • Official: Google Panda 3.9 Refresh (SER)

Link Warnings  —  July 19, 2012 (Unconfirmed)

In a repeat of March/April, Google sent out a large number of unnatural link warnings via Google Webmaster Tools. In a complete turn-around, they then announced that these new warnings may not actually represent a serious problem.

  • Insanity: Google Sends New Link Warnings, Then Says You Can Ignore Them (SEL)
  • Google Sends Out New Batch Of Unnatural Link Notifications (SER)

Panda 3.8 (#16)  —  June 25, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out another Panda data refresh, but this appeared to be data only (no algorithm changes) and had a much smaller impact than Panda 3.7.

  • Official Google Panda Update Version 3.8 On June 25th (SEL)
  • Google Panda 3.8 Live: June 25th & Refresh Only (SER)

Panda 3.7 (#15)  —  June 8, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out yet another Panda data update, claiming that less than 1% of queries were affected. Ranking fluctuation data suggested that the impact was substantially higher than previous Panda updates (3.5, 3.6).

  • Confirmed: Google Panda 3.7 Update (SER)
  • The Bigfoot Update (AKA Dr. Pete Goes Crazy) (Moz)

May 39-Pack  —  June 7, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google released their monthly Search Highlights, with 39 updates in May. Major changes included Penguin improvements, better link-scheme detection, changes to title/snippet rewriting, and updates to Google News.

  • Search quality highlights: 39 changes for May (Google)
  • Google’s May Updates: Inorganic Backlinks, Page Titles, Fresh Results & More (SEL)

Penguin 1.1 (#2)  —  May 25, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out its first targeted data update after the "Penguin" algorithm update. This confirmed that Penguin data was being processed outside of the main search index, much like Panda data.

  • Google Releases Penguin Update 1.1 (SEL)

Knowledge Graph  —  May 16, 2012 (Confirmed)

In a major step toward semantic search, Google started rolling out "Knowledge Graph", a SERP-integrated display providing supplemental object about certain people, places, and things. Expect to see "knowledge panels" appear on more and more SERPs over time. Also, Danny Sullivan's favorite Trek is ST: Voyager?!

  • Introducing the Knowledge Graph: things, not strings (Google)
  • Google Launches Knowledge Graph To Provide Answers, Not Just Links (SEL)

April 52-Pack  —  May 4, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google published details of 52 updates in April, including changes that were tied to the "Penguin" update. Other highlights included a 15% larger "base" index, improved pagination handling, and a number of updates to sitelinks.

  • Search quality highlights: 52 changes for April (Google)
  • Google’s April Updates: Bigger & Tiered Index, Document Ranking, Sitelink Changes & More (SEL)

Panda 3.6 (#14)  —  April 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

Barely a week after Panda 3.5, Google rolled out yet another Panda data update. The implications of this update were unclear, and it seemed that the impact was relatively small.

  • Confirmed: Panda Update 3.6 Happened On April 27th (SEL)

Penguin  —  April 24, 2012 (Confirmed)

After weeks of speculation about an "Over-optimization penalty", Google finally rolled out the "Webspam Update", which was soon after dubbed "Penguin." Penguin adjusted a number of spam factors, including keyword stuffing, and impacted an estimated 3.1% of English queries.

  • Another step to reward high-quality sites (Google)
  • The Penguin Update: Google’s Webspam Algorithm Gets Official Name (SEL)
  • Google Penguin Update Recovery Tips & Advice (SEL)
  • Two Weeks In, Google Talks Penguin Update, Ways To Recover & Negative SEO (SEL)

Panda 3.5 (#13)  —  April 19, 2012 (Confirmed)

In the middle of a busy week for the algorithm, Google quietly rolled out a Panda data update. A mix of changes made the impact difficult to measure, but this appears to have been a fairly routine update with minimal impact.

  • Google Mocks Me For Missing Panda 3.5 (SER)

Parked Domain Bug  —  April 16, 2012 (Confirmed)

After a number of webmasters reported ranking shuffles, Google confirmed that a data error had caused some domains to be mistakenly treated as parked domains (and thereby devalued). This was not an intentional algorithm change.

  • Dropped In Rankings? Google’s Mistake Over Parked Domains Might Be To Blame (SEL)
  • Updated: Google Update April 2012? Over SEO Penalty? (SER)

March 50-Pack  —  April 3, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google posted another batch of update highlights, covering 50 changes in March. These included confirmation of Panda 3.4, changes to anchor-text "scoring", updates to image search, and changes to how queries with local intent are interpreted.

  • Search quality highlights: 50 changes for March (Google)
  • Google’s March Updates: Anchor Text, Image Search, Navigational Search & More (SEL)

Panda 3.4 (#12)  —  March 23, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced another Panda update, this time via Twitter as the update was rolling out. Their public statements estimated that Panda 3.4 impacted about 1.6% of search results.

  • Google Says Panda 3.4 Is ‘Rolling Out Now’ (SEL)

Search Quality Video  —  March 12, 2012 (Unconfirmed)

This wasn't an algorithm update, but Google published a rare peek into a search quality meeting. For anyone interested in the algorithm, the video provides a lot of context to both Google's process and their priorities. It's also a chance to see Amit Singhal in action.

  • Video! The search quality meeting, uncut (Google)

Venice  —  February 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

As part of their monthly update, Google mentioned code name "Venice". This local update appeared to more aggressively localize organic results and more tightly integrate local search data. The exact roll-out date was unclear.

  • Understand and Rock the Google Venice Update (Moz)
  • Google Venice Update – New Ranking Opportunities for Local SEO (Catalyst eMarketing)

February 40-Pack (2)  —  February 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google published a second set of "search quality highlights" at the end of the month, claiming more than 40 changes in February. Notable changes included multiple image-search updates, multiple freshness updates (including phasing out 2 old bits of the algorithm), and a Panda update.

  • Search quality highlights: 40 changes for February (Google)

Panda 3.3 (#11)  —  February 27, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out another post-"flux" Panda update, which appeared to be relatively minor. This came just 3 days after the 1-year anniversary of Panda, an unprecedented lifespan for a named update.

  • Google Confirms Panda 3.3 Update (SEL)
  • Confirmed: Google Panda 3.3 (SER)

February 17-Pack  —  February 3, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google released another round of "search quality highlights" (17 in all). Many related to speed, freshness, and spell-checking, but one major announcement was the tighter integration of Panda into the main search index.

  • 17 search quality highlights: January (Google)
  • Google’s January Search Update: Panda In The Pipelines, Fresher Results, Date Detection & More (SEL)

Ads Above The Fold  —  January 19, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google updated its page layout algorithms to devalue sites with too much ad space above the "fold". It was previously suspected that a similar factor was in play in Panda. The update had no official name, although it was referenced as "Top Heavy" by some SEOs.

  • Page layout algorithm improvement (Google)
  • Pages With Too Many Ads “Above The Fold” Now Penalized By Google’s “Page Layout” Algorithm (SEL)

Panda 3.2 (#10)  —  January 18, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google confirmed a Panda data update, although suggested that the algorithm hadn't changed. It was unclear how this fit into the "Panda Flux" scheme of more frequent data updates.

  • Confirmed: Google Panda 3.2 Update (SEW)
  • Google Panda 3.2 Update Confirmed (SEL)

Search + Your World  —  January 10, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced a radical shift in personalization - aggressively pushing Google+ social data and user profiles into SERPs. Google also added a new, prominent toggle button to shut off personalization.

  • Search, plus your world (Google)
  • Real-Life Examples Of How Google’s “Search Plus” Pushes Google+ Over Relevancy (SEL)

January 30-Pack  —  January 5, 2012 (Confirmed)

Google announced 30 changes over the previous month, including image search landing page quality detection, more relevant site links, more rich snippets, and related-query improvements. The line between an "algo update" and a "feature" got a bit more blurred.

  • 30 search quality highlights - with codenames! (Google)
  • Google Announces “Megasitelinks,” Image Search Improvements & Better Byline Dates (SEL)

2011 Updates

December 10-Pack  —  December 1, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google outlined a second set of 10 updates, announcing that these posts would come every month. Updates included related query refinements, parked domain detection, blog search freshness, and image search freshness. The exact dates of each update were not provided.

  • Search quality highlights: new monthly series on algorithm changes (Google)
  • Google: Parked Domains, Scraper Sites Targeted Among New Search Changes (SEL)

Panda 3.1 (#9)  —  November 18, 2011 (Confirmed)

After Panda 2.5, Google entered a period of "Panda Flux" where updates started to happen more frequently and were relatively minor. Some industry analysts called the 11/18 update 3.1, even though there was no official 3.0. For the purposes of this history, we will discontinue numbering Panda updates except for very high-impact changes.

  • Google Panda 3.1 Update: 11/18 (SER)

10-Pack of Updates  —  November 14, 2011 (Confirmed)

This one was a bit unusual. In a bid to be more transparent, Matt Cutts released a post with 10 recent algorithm updates. It's not clear what the timeline was, and most were small updates, but it did signal a shift in how Google communicates algorithm changes.

  • Ten recent algorithm changes (Google)
  • Improved Snippets, Rank Boost For “Official” Pages Among 10 New Google Algorithm Changes (SEL)

Freshness Update  —  November 3, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google announced that an algorithm change rewarding freshness would impact up to 35% of queries (almost 3X the publicly stated impact of Panda 1.0). This update primarily affected time-sensitive results but signaled a much stronger focus on recent content.

  • Giving you fresher, more recent search results (Google)
  • Google Search Algorithm Change For Freshness To Impact 35% Of Searches (SEL)

Query Encryption  —  October 18, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google announced they would be encrypting search queries, for privacy reasons. Unfortunately, this disrupted organic keyword referral data, returning "(not provided)" for some organic traffic. This number increased in the weeks following the launch.

  • Making search more secure (Google)
  • Google Hides Search Referral Data with New SSL Implementation (Moz)

Panda "Flux" (#8)  —  October 5, 2011 (Confirmed)

Matt Cutts tweeted: "expect some Panda-related flux in the next few weeks" and gave a figure of "~2%". Other minor Panda updates occurred on 10/3, 10/13, and 11/18.

  • Taking a Closer Look at the Google’s Panda 2.5 “Flux” (SEL)
  • “Minor” Google Panda Update On November 18th (SEL)

Panda 2.5 (#7)  —  September 28, 2011 (Confirmed)

After more than a month, Google rolled out another Panda update. Specific details of what changed were unclear, but some sites reported large-scale losses.

  • Confirmed: Google Panda 2.5 Update Arrived This Week (SEL)
  • Google Panda 2.5: Losers Include Today Show, The Next Web; Winners Include YouTube, Fox News (SEL)

516 Algo Updates  —  September 21, 2011 (Confirmed)

This wasn't an update, but it was an amazing revelation. Google CEO Eric Schmidt told Congress that Google made 516 updates in 2010. The real shocker? They tested over 13,000 updates.

  • Eric Schmidt's Congressional Testimony (SEL)

Pagination Elements  —  September 15, 2011 (Confirmed)

To help fix crawl and duplication problems created by pagination, Google introduced the rel="next" and rel="prev" link attributes. Google also announced that they had improved automatic consolidation and canonicalization for "View All" pages.

  • Pagination with rel=“next” and rel=“prev” (Google)
  • Google Provides New Options for Paginated Content (SEL)

Expanded Sitelinks  —  August 16, 2011 (Confirmed)

After experimenting for a while, Google officially rolled out expanded site links, most often for brand queries. At first, these were 12-packs, but Google appeared to limit the expanded site links to 6 shortly after the roll-out.

  • The evolution of sitelinks: expanded and improved (Google)
  • Official: Google Sitelinks Expands To 12 Pack (SEL)

Panda 2.4 (#6)  —  August 12, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google rolled Panda out internationally, both for English-language queries globally and non-English queries except for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. Google reported that this impacted 6-9% of queries in affected countries.

  • High-quality sites algorithm launched in additional languages (Google)
  • Google’s Panda Update Launches Internationally in Most Languages (SEL)

Panda 2.3 (#5)  —  July 23, 2011 (Confirmed)

Webmaster chatter suggested that Google rolled out yet another update. It was unclear whether new factors were introduced, or this was simply an update to the Panda data and ranking factors.

  • Official: Google Panda 2.3 Update Is Live (SEL)
  • A Holistic Look at Panda with Vanessa Fox (Stone Temple)

Google+  —  June 28, 2011 (Confirmed)

After a number of social media failures, Google launched a serious attack on Facebook with Google+. Google+ revolved around circles for sharing content and was tightly integrated into products like Gmail. Early adopters were quick to jump on board, and within 2 weeks Google+ reached 10M users.

  • Introducing the Google+ project: Real-life sharing, rethought for the web (Google)
  • Larry Page On Google+: Over 10 Million Users, 1 Billion Items Being Shared Per Day (TechCrunch)

Panda 2.2 (#4)  —  June 21, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google continued to update Panda-impacted sites and data, and version 2.2 was officially acknowledged. Panda updates occurred separately from the main index and not in real-time, reminiscent of early Google Dance updates.

  • Official: Google Panda Update 2.2 Is Live (SEL)
  • Why Google Panda Is More of A Ranking Factor Than Algorithm Update (SEL)

Schema.org  —  June 2, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft jointly announced support for a consolidated approach to structured data. They also created a number of new "schemas", in an apparent bid to move toward even richer search results.

Google, Bing & Yahoo Unite To Make Search Listings Richer Through Structured Data (SEL) What is Schema.org? (Schema.org)

Panda 2.1 (#3)  —  May 9, 2011 (Confirmed)

Initially dubbed “Panda 3.0”, Google appeared to roll out yet another round of changes. These changes weren’t discussed in detail by Google and seemed to be relatively minor.

  • It’s Panda Update 2.1, Not Panda 3.0, Google Says (SEL)
  • Google Panda 3.0 (SERoundtable)

Panda 2.0 (#2)  —  April 11, 2011 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out the Panda update to all English queries worldwide (not limited to English-speaking countries). New signals were also integrated, including data about sites users blocked via the SERPs directly or the Chrome browser.

  • High-quality sites algorithm goes global, incorporates user feedback (Google)
  • Panda 2.0: Google Rolls Out Panda Update Internationally & Incorporates Searcher Blocking Data (SEL)

The +1 Button  —  March 30, 2011 (Confirmed)

Responding to competition by major social sites, including Facebook and Twitter, Google launched the +1 button (directly next to results links). Clicking [+1] allowed users to influence search results within their social circle, across both organic and paid results.

  • Recommendations when you want them (Google)
  • Meet +1: Google's Answer To The Facebook Like Button (SEL)

Panda/Farmer  —  February 23, 2011 (Confirmed)

A major algorithm update hit sites hard, affecting up to 12% of search results (a number that came directly from Google). Panda seemed to crack down on thin content, content farms, sites with high ad-to-content ratios, and a number of other quality issues. Panda rolled out over at least a couple of months, hitting Europe in April 2011.

  • The 'Panda' That Hates Farms: A Q&A With Google's Top Search Engineers (Wired)
  • Google's Farmer/Panda Update: Analysis of Winners vs. Losers (Moz)

Attribution Update  —  January 28, 2011 (Confirmed)

In response to high-profile spam cases, Google rolled out an update to help better sort out content attribution and stop scrapers. According to Matt Cutts, this affected about 2% of queries. It was a clear precursor to the Panda updates.

  • Algorithm Change Launched (Matt Cutts)
  • Latest Google Algorithm change (Search News Central)

Overstock.com Penalty  —  January 1, 2011 (Unconfirmed)

In a rare turn of events, a public outing of shady SEO practices by Overstock.com resulted in a very public Google penalty. JCPenney was hit with a penalty in February for similar bad behavior. Both situations represented a shift in Google's attitude and foreshadowed the Panda update.

  • Google Penalizes Overstock for Search Tactics (WSJ)
  • Overstock.com's Google Rankings - Too Good? (WMW)

2010 Updates

Negative Reviews  —  December 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

After an expose in the New York Times about how e-commerce site DecorMyEyes was ranking based on negative reviews, Google made a rare move and reactively adjusted the algorithm to target sites using similar tactics.

  • A Bully Finds a Pulpit on the Web (NY Times)
  • Being bad to your customers is bad for business (Google)

Social Signals  —  December 1, 2010 (Unconfirmed)

Google and Bing confirmed that they use social signals in determining to rank, including data from Twitter and Facebook. Matt Cutts confirmed that this was a relatively new development for Google, although many SEOs had long suspected it would happen.

  • What Social Signals Do Google & Bing Really Count? (SEL)
  • Google Webmaster Video Reconfirms Use Of Social Signals (SEL)

Instant Previews  —  November 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

A magnifying glass icon appeared on Google search results, allowing search visitors to quickly view a preview of landing pages directly from SERPs. This signaled a renewed focus for Google on landing page quality, design, and usability.

  • Beyond Instant Results: Instant Previews (Google)

Google Instant  —  September 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

Expanding on Google Suggest, Google Instant launched, displaying search results as a query was being typed. SEOs everywhere nearly spontaneously combusted, only to realize that the impact was ultimately fairly small.

  • About Google Instant (Google)
  • Google Instant: Fewer Changes to SEO than the Average Algo Update (Moz)

Brand Update  —  August 1, 2010 (Unconfirmed)

Although not a traditional algorithm update, Google started allowing the same domain to appear multiple times on a SERP. Previously, domains were limited to 1-2 listings or 1 listing with indented results.

  • Google Search Results Dominated By One Domain (SEL)

Caffeine (Rollout)  —  June 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

After months of testing, Google finished rolling out the Caffeine infrastructure. Caffeine not only boosted Google's raw speed but integrated crawling and indexation much more tightly, resulting in (according to Google) a 50% fresher index.

  • Our new search index: Caffeine (Google)
  • Google’s New Indexing Infrastructure “Caffeine” Now Live (SEL)

May Day  —  May 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

In late April and early May, webmasters noticed significant drops in their long-tail traffic. Matt Cutts later confirmed that May Day was an algorithm change impacting the long tail. Sites with large-scale thin content seemed to be hit especially hard, foreshadowing the Panda update.

  • Google Search Results Dominated By One Domain (SEL)
  • Video: Google's Matt Cutts On May Day Update (SERoundtable)

Google Places  —  April 1, 2010 (Confirmed)

Although "Places" pages were rolled out in September of 2009, they were originally only a part of Google Maps. The official launch of Google Places re-branded the Local Business Center, integrated Places pages more closely with local search results, and added a number of features, including new local advertising options.

  • Google Local Business Center Becomes "Google Places" (SEL)
  • Introducing Google Places (Google)

2009 Updates

Real-time Search  —  December 1, 2009 (Confirmed)

This time, the real-time search was for real Twitter feeds Google News, newly indexed content, and a number of other sources were integrated into a real-time feed on some SERPs. Sources continued to expand over time, including social media.

  • Google Launches Real-Time Search Results (SEL)

Caffeine (Preview)  —  August 1, 2009 (Unconfirmed)

Google released a preview of a massive infrastructure change, designed to speed crawling, expand the index, and integrate indexation and ranking in nearly real-time. The timeline spanned months, with the final rollout starting in the US in early 2010 and lasting until the summer.

  • Google Caffeine: A Detailed Test of the New Google (Mashable)
  • Help test some next-generation infrastructure (Google)

Vince  —  February 1, 2009 (Unconfirmed)

SEOs reported a major update that seemed to strongly favor big brands. Matt Cutts called Vince a "minor change", but others felt it had profound long-term implications.

  • Big Brands - Google Brand Promotion: New Search Engine Rankings Place Heavy Emphasis on Branding (SEO Book)
  • Google's Vince Update Produces Big Brand Rankings; Google Calls It A Trust "Change" (SEL)

Rel-canonical Tag  —  February 1, 2009 (Confirmed)

Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo jointly announced support for the Canonical Tag, allowing webmasters to send canonicalization signals to search bots without impacting human visitors.

  • Learn about the Canonical Link Element in 5 minutes (MattCutts.com)
  • Canonical URL Tag - The Most Important Advancement in SEO Practices Since Sitemaps (Moz)

2008 Updates

Google Suggest  —  August 1, 2008 (Confirmed)

In a major change to their logo-and-a-box home page Google introduced Suggest, displaying suggested searches in a dropdown below the search box as visitors typed their queries. Suggest would later go on to power Google Instant.

  • Google.com Finally Gets Google Suggest Feature (SEL)

Dewey  —  April 1, 2008 (Confirmed)

A large-scale shuffle seemed to occur at the end of March and into early April, but the specifics were unclear. Some suspected Google was pushing its own internal properties, including Google Books, but the evidence of that was limited.

  • Google's Cutts Asking for Feedback on March/April '08 Update (SERoundtable)

2007 Updates

Buffy  —  June 1, 2007 (Unconfirmed)

In honor of Vanessa Fox leaving Google, the "Buffy" update was christened. No one was quite sure what happened, and Matt Cutts suggested that Buffy was just an accumulation of smaller changes.

  • Google "Buffy" Update - June Google.com Update (SERoundtable)
  • SMX Seattle wrap-up (MattCutts.com)

Universal Search  —  May 1, 2007  (Confirmed)

While not your typical algorithm update, Google integrated traditional search results with News, Video, Images, Local, and other verticals, dramatically changing their format. The old 10-listing SERP was officially dead. Long live the old 10-listing SERP.

  • Google 2.0: Google Universal Search (SEL)

2006 Updates

False Alarm  —  December 1, 2006 (Unconfirmed)

There were stirrings about an update in December, along with some reports of major ranking changes in November, but Google reported no major changes.

  • Google Update Debunked By Matt Cutts (SERoundtable)

Supplemental Update  —  November 1, 2006 (Unconfirmed)

Throughout 2006, Google seemed to make changes to the supplemental index and how filtered pages were treated. They claimed in late 2006 that supplemental was not a penalty (even if it sometimes felt that way).

  • Confusion Over Google's Supplemental Index (SERoundtable)

2005 Updates

Big Daddy  —  December 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

Technically, Big Daddy was an infrastructure update (like the more recent "Caffeine"), and it rolled out over a few months, wrapping up in March of 2006. Big Daddy changed the way Google handled URL canonicalization, redirects (301/302), and other technical issues.

  • Indexing timeline (MattCutts.com)
  • Todd, Greg & Matt Cutts on WebMasterRadio (Moz)

Google Local/Maps  —  October 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

After launching the Local Business Center in March 2005 and encouraging businesses to update their information, Google merged its Maps data into the LBC, in a move that would eventually drive a number of changes in local SEO.

  • Google Merges Local and Maps Products (Google)

Jagger  —  October 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

Google released a series of updates, mostly targeted at low-quality links, including reciprocal links, link farms, and paid links. Jagger rolled out in at least 3 stages, from roughly September to November of 2005, with the greatest impact occurring in October.

  • A Review Of The Jagger 2 Update (SERoundtable)
  • Dealing With Consequences of Jagger Update (WMW)

Gilligan  —  September 1, 2005 (Unconfirmed)

Also called the "False" update webmasters saw changes (probably ongoing), but Google claimed no major algorithm update occurred. Matt Cutts wrote a blog post explaining that Google updated (at the time) index data daily but Toolbar PR and some other metrics only once every 3 months.

  • Google's Cutts Says Not An Update - I Say An Update, Just Not A Dance (SEW)
  • What's an update? (MattCutts.com)

XML Sitemaps  —  June 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

Google allowed webmasters to submit XML sitemaps via Webmaster Tools, bypassing traditional HTML sitemaps, and giving SEOs direct (albeit minor) influence over crawling and indexation.

  • New "Google Sitemaps" Web Page Feed Program (SEW)

Personalized Search  —  June 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

Unlike previous attempts at personalization, which required custom settings and profiles, the 2005 roll-out of personalized search tapped directly into users' search histories to automatically adjust results. Although the impact was small at first, Google would go on to use search history for many applications.

  • Google Relaunches Personal Search - This Time, It Really Is Personal (SEW)
  • Search gets personal (Google)

Bourbon  —  May 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

"GoogleGuy" (likely Matt Cutts) announced that Google was rolling out "something like 3.5 changes in search quality." No one was sure what 0.5 of a change was, but Webmaster World members speculated that Bourbon changed how duplicate content and non-canonical (www vs. non-www) URLs were treated.

  • Google Update "Bourbon" (Batelle Media)
  • Bourbon Update Survival Kit (SERoundtable)

Allegra  —  February 1, 2005 (Unconfirmed)

Webmasters witnessed ranking changes, but the specifics of the update were unclear. Some thought Allegra affected the "sandbox" while others believed that LSI had been tweaked. Additionally, some speculated that Google was beginning to penalize suspicious links.

  • Google's Feb. 2005 Update (SEW)

Nofollow  —  January 1, 2005 (Confirmed)

To combat spam and control outbound link quality, Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft collectively introduce the "nofollow" attribute. Nofollow helps clean up untouched links, including spammy blog comments. While not a traditional algorithm update, this change gradually has a significant impact on the link graph.

  • Google, Yahoo, MSN Unite On Support For Nofollow Attribute For Links (SEW)

2004 Updates

Google IPO  —  August 1, 2004 (Unconfirmed)

Although obviously not an algorithm update, a major event in Google's history - Google sold 19M shares, raised $1.67B in capital, and set its market value at over $20B. By January 2005, Google share prices more than doubled.

  • Google IPO priced at $85 a share (CNN)

Brandy  —  February 1, 2004 (Confirmed)

Google rolled out a variety of changes, including a massive index expansion, Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI), increased attention to anchor text relevance, and the concept of link "neighborhoods." LSI expanded Google's ability to understand synonyms and took keyword analysis to the next level.

  • Google's Brandy Update Exposed (WebProNews)
  • How To Beat Google's "Brandy" Update (SitePoint)

Austin  —  January 1, 2004 (Unconfirmed)

What Florida missed, Austin came in to clean up. Google continued to crack down on deceptive on-page tactics, including invisible text and META-tag stuffing. Some speculated that Google put the "Hilltop" algorithm into play and began to take page relevance seriously.

  • The latest on update Austin (Google's January update) (SEJ)
  • Google Update Austin: Google Update Florida Again (Search-Marketing.info)

2003 Updates

Florida  —  November 1, 2003 (Confirmed)

This was the update that put updates (and probably the SEO industry) on the map. Many sites lost ranking, and business owners were furious. Florida sounded the death knell for low-value late 90s SEO tactics, like keyword stuffing, and made the game a whole lot more interesting.

  • What Happened To My Site On Google? (SEW)

Supplemental Index  —  September 1, 2003 (Unconfirmed)

In order to index more documents without sacrificing performance, Google split off some results into the "supplemental" index. The perils of having results go supplemental became a hotly debated SEO topic until the index was later reintegrated.

  • Search Engine Size Wars & Google's Supplemental Results (SEW)

Fritz  —  July 1, 2003 (Confirmed)

The monthly "Google Dance" finally came to an end with the "Fritz" update. Instead of completely overhauling the index on a roughly monthly basis, Google switched to an incremental approach. The index was now changing daily.

  • Explaining algorithm updates and data refreshes (Matt Cutts)
  • Exclusive: How Google’s Algorithm Rules the Web (Wired)

Esmeralda  —  June 1, 2003 (Unconfirmed)

This marked the last of the regular monthly Google updates, as a more continuous update process began to emerge. The "Google Dance" was replaced with "Everflux". Esmerelda probably heralded some major infrastructure changes at Google.

Dominic  —  May 1, 2003 (Unconfirmed)

While many changes were observed in May, the exact nature of Dominic was unclear. Google bots "Freshbot" and "Deepcrawler" scoured the web, and many sites reported bounces. The way Google counted or reported backlinks seemed to change dramatically.

  • Understanding Dominic - Part 2 (WMW)

Cassandra  —  April 1, 2003 (Unconfirmed)

Google cracked down on some basic link-quality issues, such as massive linking from co-owned domains. Cassandra also came down hard on hidden text and hidden links.

Boston  —  February 1, 2003 (Confirmed)

Announced at SES Boston, this was the first named Google update. Originally, Google aimed at a major monthly update, so the first few updates were a combination of algorithm changes and major index refreshes (the so-called "Google Dance"). As updates became more frequent, the monthly idea quickly died.

2002 Updates

1st Documented Update —  September 1, 2002 (Unconfirmed)

Before "Boston" (the first named update), there was a major shuffle in the Fall of 2002. The details are unclear, but this appeared to be more than the monthly Google Dance and PageRank update. As one webmaster said of Google: "they move the toilet mid-stream".

  • September 2002 Google Update Discussion - Part 1 (WMW)
  • Dancing The Google Dance (Level343)

2000 Updates

Google Toolbar — December 1, 2000 (Confirmed)

Guaranteeing SEO arguments for years to come, Google launched its browser toolbar, and with it, Toolbar PageRank (TBPR). As soon as webmasters started watching TBPR, the Google Dance began.

  • Google Launches The Google Toolbar (Google)

Content Source: Moz.com

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