Google is urging site owners to give every image they care about a dedicated, crawlable URL. The recommendation came from Search Advocates John Mueller and Martin Splitt during the latest Search Off the Record podcast.
Why unique image pages matter
Google treats pages that load multiple pictures at once as galleries, not as destinations for individual images. When each asset sits on its own HTML page with descriptive text, Google Images can index and rank it for relevant queries.
Splitt added that lightboxes, JavaScript-only galleries, and URL fragments (the part after “#”) often prevent Googlebot from accessing a single image directly.
Key details from the discussion
- Speakers: John Mueller and Martin Splitt, Google Search Relations.
- Format: “Search Off the Record” podcast, published the first week of April 2024.
- Recommendation: Serve each important photo on its own HTML page that works without JavaScript.
- Common pitfalls: JavaScript-only galleries, lightboxes, and “#” URL fragments.
- Technical note: Modern formats such as WebP and AVIF improve speed but do not directly boost image-search rankings.
Consistent with existing guidance
Google’s documentation has long stated that every image should live at an indexable URL with context around it. Many portfolio themes and CMS plugins load dozens of pictures behind a single gallery path, limiting what Google Images can see. The new comments reiterate that design choice—performance gains alone are not enough to secure visibility.
For more details, consult Google’s image best practices.