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Google Search Console performance reports delays fixed

Screenshot of Google Search Console

Google Search Console seems to have fixed the weeks long delay with the search performance reports. For the past few weeks, we had 50+ hour delays for these reports, but as of the past several hours, the reports seem to be up-to-date.

Now up-to-date. If you go to the search performance report, you should just see anywhere between about 2 – 6 hours of delay, which is typically normal. At some point over the past few weeks, the delays were over 70 hours.

This is what I see:

The delays started a few weeks ago and it took about three weeks to clear the delay and backlog of data.

Page indexing report. Meanwhile, the page indexing report delay we reported many weeks ago, is still delayed. It is now almost a full month delayed and Google has not fixed it yet. Google did post a notice at the top of the report that reads:

“Due to internal issues, this report has not been updated to reflect recent data”

Why we care. If you use Search Console reporting for your analytics and reporting for your stakeholders and clients, this can be super frustrating. It does seem like the performance reports are now flowing data normally. But that indexing report is still very delayed and will cause headaches with reporting.

Meanwhile, Google released a number of new features in the past few weeks including:

Google says don’t use JavaScript to generate a noindex tag in the original page code

Google has updated its JavaScript SEO basics documentation to clarify how Google’s crawler handles noindex tags in pages that use JavaScript. In short, if “you do want the page indexed, don’t use a noindex tag in the original page code,” Google wrote.

What is new. Google updated this section to read:

  • “When Google encounters the noindex tag, it may skip rendering and JavaScript execution, which means using JavaScript to change or remove the robots meta tag from noindex may not work as expected. If you do want the page indexed, don’t use a noindex tag in the original page code.”

In the past, it read:

  • “If Google encounters the noindex tag, it skips rendering and JavaScript execution. Because Google skips your JavaScript in this case, there is no chance to remove the tag from the page. Using JavaScript to change or remove the robots meta tag might not work as expected. Google skips rendering and JavaScript execution if the robots meta tag initially contains noindex. If there is a possibility that you do want the page indexed, don’t use a noindex tag in the original page code.”

Why the change. Google explained, “While Google may be able to render a page that uses JavaScript, the behavior of this is not well defined and might change. If there’s a possibility that you do want the page indexed, don’t use a noindex tag in the original page code.”

Why we care. It may be safer not to use JavaScript for important protocols and blocking of Googlebot or other crawlers. If you want to ensure a search engine does not rank a specific page, make sure not to use JavaScript to execute those directives.

Google December 2025 core update rolling out now

Google released the December 2025 core update today, the company announced.

This is the third core update of 2025 and the fourth major Google algorithm update overall. Earlier this year, Google rolled out the August 2025 spam update, which followed the June 2025 core update and the March 2025 core update.

What Google is saying. Google updated its Search Status Dashboard to state:

  • “Released the December 2025 core update. The rollout may take up to 3 weeks to complete.”

Google added on LinkedIn:

  • “This is a regular update designed to better surface relevant, satisfying content for searchers from all types of sites.”

About core updates. Core updates roll out several times each year. They introduce broad, significant changes to Google’s search algorithms and systems, which is why Google announces them.

Video on this core update. I made this short video a few hours after publishing this story:

What to do if you are hit. Google did not share any new guidance specific to the December 2025 core update. However, in the past, Google has offered advice on what to consider if a core update negatively impacts your site:

  • There aren’t specific actions to take to recover. A negative rankings impact may not signal anything is wrong with your pages.
  • Google offered a list of questions to consider if your site is hit by a core update.
  • Google said you can see some recovery between core updates, but the biggest change would be after another core update.

In short: write helpful content for people and not to rank in search engines.

  • “There’s nothing new or special that creators need to do for this update as long as they’ve been making satisfying content meant for people. For those that might not be ranking as well, we strongly encourage reading our creating helpful, reliable, people-first content help page,” Google said previously.

For more details on Google core updates, you can read Google’s documentation.

Previous core updates. Here’s a timeline and our coverage of recent core updates:

Why we care. With any core update, we often see significant volatility in Google search results and rankings. These updates may improve visibility for your site or your clients’ sites, but some may experience fluctuations or even declines in rankings and organic traffic. We hope this update rewards your efforts and drives strong traffic and conversions.

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This was the third core update and fourth confirmed Google update in 2025. The December core update will take up to three weeks to rollout.
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