I Fixed 100 404s. Traffic Barely Moved.Then I Checked the Data.
A crawl report showing 100-plus 404 errors had me feeling like I'd found the smoking gun. Pages that didn't exist anymore, broken links everywhere.
I fixed them all, redirected the orphans, cleaned up the mess. Three weeks later, traffic was flat.
That's when I realized something: not all 404s matter equally.
The ones that mattered were the pages getting actual traffic or backlinks before they broke. A 404 on a page nobody visited is noise.
A 404 on a page linked from another site or cited in your own internal navigation is the one eating your rankings. Google's guidance on 404s makes this clear, but the data is what convinced me.
I pulled my access logs and found about 15 of those 100 errors were actually generating impressions or clicks.
The lesson isn't fix all 404s. It's find the 404s costing you visibility.
Google Search Console shows exactly which broken pages appear in search results. Fix those first, the rest can wait until you have time.
Our SEO work prioritizes by impact, not by error count. Our Florida Local Search Index keeps showing that targeted fixes beat tidy-everything sweeps every time.
Pull your 404 report from Search Console and sort by impressions. Fix the top five first, those are the broken pages people and links actually hit. The other 95 are mostly noise you can clean up whenever you have a spare afternoon.
