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Don’t Worry About Google Penalties From Invalid HTML (At Least for Right Now)

Ever wonder how the quality of your HTML is affecting your rankings in Google? Well, at least for the time being, it’s not having any effect at all, regardless of how clean it is. Google’s...
Don’t Worry About Google Penalties From Invalid HTML (At Least for Right Now)
Written by Chris Crum
  • Ever wonder how the quality of your HTML is affecting your rankings in Google? Well, at least for the time being, it’s not having any effect at all, regardless of how clean it is. Google’s Matt Cutts said as much in a new Webmaster Help video.

    Cutts was answering the following submitted question:

    Does the crawler really care about valid HTML? Validating google.com gives me 23 errors and 4 warnings.

    “There are plenty of reasons to write valid HTML, and to pay attention to your HTML, and to make sure that it’s really clean and that it validates,” says Cutts. “It makes it more maintainable. It makes it easier whenever you want to upgrade. It makes it much better if you want to hand that code off to somebody else. There’s just a lot of good reasons to do it. At the same time, Google has to work with the web we have, not the web that we want to have. And the web that we have has a lot of syntax errors – a lot of invalid HTML, and so we have to build the crawler to compensate for that and to deal with all the errors and weird syntax that people sometimes mistakenly write in a broken way onto the web.”

    “So Google does not penalize you if you have invalid HTML because there would be a huge number of webpages like that,” he says. “And some people know the rules and then decide to make things a little bit faster or to tweak things here or there, and so their pages don’t validate, and there are enough pages that don’t validate that we said, ‘Okay, this would actually hurt search quality,’ if we said, ‘Only the pages that validate are allowed to rank or rank those a little bit higher’. First and foremost, we have to look at the quality of the information, and whether users are getting the most relevant information they need rather than someone has done a very good job of making the cleanest website they can.”

    “Now, I wouldn’t be surprised if they correlate relatively well,” he adds. “You know, maybe it’s a signal we’ll consider in the future, but at least for right now, do it because it’s good for maintenance. It’s easier for you if you want to change the site in the future. Don’t just do it because you think it will give you higher search rankings.”

    Or maybe you should do it also because Google might decide to use it in the future, and then you’ll have your bases covered.

    Image: Google

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