John Lincoln

2026 Google Search Quality Rater Guidelines Compliance Checklist (Complete)

Google Search Quality Rater Guidelines Compliance Checklist

Google’s Search Quality Rater Guidelines (SQRG) are not a direct ranking algorithm, but they are the playbook human raters use to evaluate how helpful, relevant, and trustworthy search results feel to real people. In practice, that makes them one of the clearest windows into what Google considers “high quality.”

This checklist is designed to help businesses align their websites with those guidelines as much as possible. The goal isn’t to “game” the system, but to systematically build pages that are safe, accurate, trustworthy, and genuinely useful for users, in line with how Google Search evaluates and surfaces information.

Use this as a practical framework: review each section, identify gaps on your site, and turn them into concrete action items for your dev, content, SEO, and compliance teams. No checklist can guarantee rankings, but this one will bring your site much closer to what Google’s raters are trained to reward.


1. Establish Clear Purpose & High-Quality Main Content

  • Each page has a clearly defined purpose (inform, sell, compare, support, entertain, educate).
  • Main content directly serves that purpose without unnecessary fluff or keyword stuffing.
  • Content shows real effort, originality, and depth (not thin or boilerplate).
  • Pages that rely on freshness (news, data, regulations, offers) are reviewed and updated regularly.
  • No auto-generated or AI-only pages published without human review and editing.
  • Key facts are accurate, explained clearly, and verifiable from reputable sources.

2. Demonstrate E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness)

Experience

  • Content includes first-hand examples, case studies, screenshots, or real use stories.
  • For product or service pages, there is evidence of hands-on use or implementation.

Expertise

  • Complex topics (health, finance, legal, safety, major life decisions) are written or reviewed by qualified experts.
  • Author bios highlight relevant credentials, certifications, or years of experience.
  • Content avoids giving specific professional advice where you are not qualified to do so; uses appropriate disclaimers.

Authoritativeness

  • The brand has external signals of authority (press mentions, awards, authoritative backlinks, industry associations).
  • Important pieces of content reference reputable external sources (journals, official stats, government, recognized authorities).
  • Internal links point to your strongest, most in-depth resources to reinforce topical authority.

Trustworthiness

  • Each article has a clear author name and, ideally, a profile page.
  • There is a detailed “About” page explaining who is behind the site and why it exists.
  • Contact information (email, form, phone, address where relevant) is easy to find.
  • Privacy policy, terms of service, cookie notice, and disclaimers are clearly linked in the footer or main nav.
  • The entire site is served over HTTPS with a valid SSL certificate.
  • No deceptive, misleading, or hidden elements (e.g., disguised ads, fake buttons).

3. Create Professional, Transparent Website Information

  • “About” page includes company history, mission, leadership, and ownership where appropriate.
  • Editorial policy or content standards are documented (even briefly) and accessible.
  • Product and service descriptions are accurate, detailed, and not misleading.
  • Customer service information (support channels, response times, refund/return policies) is easy to find.
  • Testimonials and reviews are real, traceable, and not manipulated or fabricated.

4. Avoid Harmful, Dangerous, or Misleading Content

  • No content encourages harm, hate, illegal activity, or unsafe behavior.
  • YMYL (Your Money or Your Life) content is strictly fact-checked and reviewed by subject-matter experts.
  • Claims about health, finance, or legal matters are cautious, sourced, and updated as information changes.
  • Outdated or disproven information is corrected or clearly marked as historical/archived.
  • Sensationalist or clickbait headlines that misrepresent the actual content are avoided.

5. Ensure Strong Page Quality (PQ) Signals

  • Overall design looks professional and consistent (not broken, amateur, or spammy).
  • Text is well structured with logical headings, paragraphs, lists, and spacing.
  • Typography is readable on desktop and mobile (font size, line height, contrast).
  • Ads do not dominate the page or push main content below the fold.
  • Interstitials and pop-ups are used sparingly and are easy to close.
  • Call-to-action buttons are clearly labeled and not deceptive.
  • Page load speed is optimized (compressed images, caching, efficient code).

6. Ensure “Needs Met” (NM) for User Intent

  • Each page is mapped to a primary intent: informational, transactional, navigational, local, or comparative.
  • Above-the-fold content immediately clarifies what the page is about and who it’s for.
  • The main question implied by the target query is answered quickly and clearly.
  • Supporting sections deepen the answer without drifting off-topic.
  • Internal links make it easy to go deeper or complete related tasks (e.g., buy, contact, compare).
  • On mobile, content and navigation are easy to scroll, tap, and read without zooming.

7. Content Accuracy & Credibility

  • Important claims are supported by citations, references, or links to authoritative sources.
  • Data, statistics, and studies include dates and sources so readers can verify and judge freshness.
  • Content has a last-updated date for pages where timeliness matters.
  • There is a documented process to review and update critical content on a defined schedule.
  • Speculative or opinion-based content is clearly labeled as such and not presented as hard fact.

8. Strong Site Reputation & External Validation

  • The business maintains profiles on relevant platforms (Google Business Profile, industry directories, LinkedIn, etc.). For local visibility, make sure your Google Business Profile is fully optimized.
  • Third-party reviews are monitored and responded to professionally.
  • There are credible mentions or backlinks from respected sites in your niche.
  • Any controversies, recalls, or issues are addressed transparently if they are widely known.

9. User Experience (UX) & Accessibility

  • Pages load in a reasonable timeframe (ideally under 2–3 seconds for most users).
  • The design is mobile-first and responsive across devices and screen sizes.
  • Main navigation is clear, shallow, and logically grouped.
  • Breadcrumbs, internal search, and category pages help users explore easily.
  • Alt-text describes images meaningfully, especially for important visuals.
  • Forms are simple, clearly labeled, and do not ask for unnecessary sensitive data.
  • Broken links, 404s, and technical errors are monitored and fixed regularly.

10. Technical Trust & Security

  • HTTPS is implemented site-wide with no mixed-content warnings.
  • CMS, plugins, and themes are kept up-to-date with security patches applied quickly.
  • Security tools (firewalls, malware scans, spam filters) are in place and monitored.
  • Cookie usage and tracking are disclosed in a clear and compliant way for your jurisdiction.
  • Login and account areas use strong authentication and protect user data.

11. Clear Monetization Transparency

  • Ads are clearly labeled and visually distinct from editorial content.
  • Affiliate links are disclosed where required (e.g., “This post contains affiliate links…”).
  • Sponsored posts or paid placements are clearly marked as such.
  • There are no deceptive patterns such as fake download buttons or disguised ads.

12. Local & Business-Specific Requirements (If Applicable)

  • Google Business Profile is fully completed with accurate hours, categories, and contact information.
  • Name, address, and phone number (NAP) are consistent across the website and external listings.
  • Local pages include unique, location-specific content (not copy-paste across cities).
  • Reviews are encouraged organically but not incentivized in a way that violates platform policies.

13. Continuous Improvement Processes

  • Regular content audits are scheduled (e.g., quarterly or biannually) to remove, update, or consolidate pages.
  • E-E-A-T criteria are applied as a checklist to every new major piece of content, aligned with Google’s guidance on creating helpful content.
  • Behavior metrics (bounce rate, time on page, scroll depth, conversion rate) are reviewed to judge whether intent is being met.
  • SERP analysis is done before publishing to understand what Google is already rewarding for target queries.
  • Competitive content gaps are identified and turned into new, higher-quality assets.

Turning Guidelines into an Operational Habit

The Search Quality Rater Guidelines are not a secret ranking formula, and they do not give you direct scores in Google’s algorithm. They are, however, a detailed description of what “high quality, helpful, and trustworthy” looks like when a human reviews your site. Treat them as a complement to resources like Google’s own SEO starter guide and the wider body of best practices around SEO.

For businesses, the most effective approach is to treat these guidelines as an operational standard, not a one-time SEO project. That means baking E-E-A-T into your content briefs, making trust and transparency part of your brand, and aligning UX decisions with what real users actually need from your pages.

If you work through this checklist and turn each item into owner-assigned tasks, your site will be much closer to what Google’s raters are trained to reward and more importantly, much more useful and credible to the people you’re trying to reach. 

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About the Author

John Lincoln is CEO of Ignite Visibility, one of the top digital marketing agencies in the nation. Outside of Ignite Visibility, Lincoln is a frequent speaker and author of the books Advolution, Digital Influencer and The Forecaster Method. Lincoln is consistently named one of the top digital marketers in the industry and was the recipient of the coveted Search Engine Land “Search Marketer of The Year” award. Lincoln has taught digital marketing and Web Analytics at the University of California San Diego since 2010, has been named as one of San Diego’s most admired CEO’s and a top business leader under 40. 

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