Google still considers NOFOLLOW links?

vldsam95

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Hey
Is Google still considers NOFOLLOW links.
For example: <a href="domain.com/cat-dog-page-10/" rel="nofollow">10</a>

Is it okay to make NOFOLLOW links inside my website to pages that are NOINDEX?
 
Is it okay to make NOFOLLOW links inside my website to pages that are NOINDEX?
Yes, that should be fine. NOFOLLOW links operate independently of NOINDEX web pages and are the same going to web pages that are indexed.
 
Hey
Is Google still considers NOFOLLOW links.
For example: <a href="domain.com/cat-dog-page-10/" rel="nofollow">10</a>

Is it okay to make NOFOLLOW links inside my website to pages that are NOINDEX?
Yep, Google still notices nofollow links, and it's totally fine to use them for pages on your site that you don't want Google to index
 
You can use noindex tags for no follow links and still users can click the link and access your website
 
Yes. Google still consider the NO FOLLOW links. Also, Yes you can use them in your site.
 
Hi
you should get 25 percent no-follow and 75 percent do-follow links for your website
 
Sure thing! Using NOFOLLOW links within your website to pages that you don't want search engines to show in their results is a good idea. It helps keep your site organized and prevents those pages from popping up in SERP
 
Yes ,Google Consider Nofollow Links ,You can use them for pages on your site
 
For what I learn. According to " Gurus " they claim is good to balance between follow links and no follow links. It will be bad if you have so much follow links whereas literally non no follow links. Summary is about " balance. "
 
Yep, Google still notices nofollow links, and it's totally fine to use them for pages on your site that you don't want Google to index

You can use noindex tags for no follow links and still users can click the link and access your website

Yes. Google still consider the NO FOLLOW links. Also, Yes you can use them in your site.

Sure thing! Using NOFOLLOW links within your website to pages that you don't want search engines to show in their results is a good idea. It helps keep your site organized and prevents those pages from popping up in SERP

Adding no-follow links to pages that don't have relevance or/ and don't show up on search engines is a good SEO practice.
And if I change the tag on those pages to "index", and keep the nofollow tag on the kibks to those pages
It will change something?

(My colleague want to make them index, because he think that it is bad to have ahref links to noindex pages)


The case is about - pagination pages on a directory website
How should i act?
 
And if I change the tag on those pages to "index", and keep the nofollow tag on the kibks to those pages
It will change something?

(My colleague want to make them index, because he think that it is bad to have ahref links to noindex pages)


The case is about - pagination pages on a directory website
How should i act?
Changing the noindex pages to index won't really change much, just make sure your pagination pages are user-friendly
 
Hey
Is Google still considers NOFOLLOW links.
For example: <a href="domain.com/cat-dog-page-10/" rel="nofollow">10</a>

Is it okay to make NOFOLLOW links inside my website to pages that are NOINDEX?
SURE thing. Google consider the NO FOLLOW link within the website and it is good to go for a website.
 
Hey
Is Google still considers NOFOLLOW links.
For example: <a href="domain.com/cat-dog-page-10/" rel="nofollow">10</a>

Is it okay to make NOFOLLOW links inside my website to pages that are NOINDEX?
D0follow or N0follow to a page with NOINDEX won't change anything... Google will see the link but won't give a shit about the page with noindex tag.
 
Yes, Google still uses the No-follow tag as a hint, and is not indexed in the search results, which affects the page ranking.

Google also introduced two new link attributes: Sponsored and User-generated content, which provide additional context for link types.
 
Yes, that should be acceptable. NOFOLLOW links function autonomously from NOINDEX web pages, and they behave similarly when directed towards indexed web pages.
 
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