How to Recover from a Google Core Update: A Step-by-Step Framework
Lost traffic after a Google core update? Follow this recovery framework from 50+ successful recoveries.
You Got Hit by a Core Update — Now What?
Waking up to a 40% traffic drop after a Google core update is stressful. But panic is not a strategy. Recovery is systematic, data-driven, and absolutely possible.
Step 1: Confirm It Was Actually a Core Update
Cross-reference your traffic drop with confirmed Google update dates. Also rule out technical issues, seasonal trends, and tracking problems.
Step 2: Analyze What Changed
Pull data from Google Search Console for the 4 weeks before and after. Which pages lost the most traffic? Which queries dropped? Were losses concentrated in a specific section?
Step 3: Audit Content Quality (E-E-A-T)
Core updates overwhelmingly target content quality. Evaluate your affected pages:
- Experience — Does the content demonstrate first-hand experience?
- Expertise — Is the author qualified to write about this topic?
- Authoritativeness — Is your site recognized as an authority?
- Trustworthiness — Are your claims sourced and verifiable?
Step 4: Compare Against What Now Ranks
For your top 20 lost keywords, analyze the pages that now rank above you. What do they have that you do not?
Step 5: Execute Improvements
- Update outdated statistics and references
- Add original insights, data, or expert quotes
- Improve content depth and comprehensiveness
- Enhance author credentials and E-E-A-T signals
- Fix technical SEO issues
- Strengthen internal linking to affected pages
Step 6: Wait for the Next Core Update
Significant recovery usually requires the next core update to take effect. Google typically rolls out core updates every 2-4 months. Make your improvements and monitor Search Console for early recovery signs.
Recovery is not guaranteed, but it is achievable. The clients who recover commit to genuine quality improvements rather than looking for shortcuts.