I Blocked Pages from Rankings.I Meant to Block Links.
There's a moment every SEO has: you're looking at your crawl data, you see pages you don't want indexed, and you reach for noindex. Feels right.
But then you realize you've been using it wrong for months, and Google's been crawling those pages anyway, wasting budget.
Here's the thing: noindex tells Google don't show this in search results. It doesn't stop crawling.
Nofollow tells Google don't follow the links on this page or don't credit this link. They do completely different jobs.
I was using noindex on pages I wanted to exist, like internal tool pages, when I should've been using nofollow on outbound links I didn't want passing authority. Google's SEO starter guide breaks down the actual use cases, and it's simpler than I thought.
The real cost isn't the tag itself, it's the confusion. You block the wrong thing, waste crawl budget on pages that shouldn't be indexed, and miss the actual links leaking your authority.
Understanding which one solves which problem changes how you approach your SEO strategy entirely.
Audit your robots.txt and meta tags together. For each page with a noindex tag, ask: do I want Google to crawl this, just not rank it? If yes, keep noindex. If no, block crawling in robots.txt instead. It's a 15-minute shift that reclaims crawl budget.
