editorial-policy
// Use when auditing a blog, news site, or YMYL content site for trust signals, drafting editorial policy page content, or evaluating whether a site meets Google's quality rater trustworthiness criteria.
Publish an editorial policy page
Google's E-E-A-T framework rates sites on Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. Quality raters look for editorial standards pages as evidence of a trustworthy publication. Sites without visible editorial policies — especially YMYL sites — receive lower trust ratings, which suppresses search rankings.
Quick Reference
- Publish a dedicated editorial policy page explaining how content is researched, written, reviewed, and updated
- Link to the editorial policy from your About page and from individual articles (byline or footer)
- Include information on author qualifications, fact-checking processes, and correction policies
Check
Check if the site has a publicly accessible editorial policy page (commonly at /editorial-policy, /about/editorial-standards, or linked from the About page). Verify it covers: (1) how topics are chosen, (2) author qualifications, (3) fact-checking or review process, (4) how corrections are handled, and (5) conflicts of interest or funding disclosures.
Fix
- Create a page at /editorial-policy (or /about/editorial-standards).
- Include these sections:
- Mission: what topics you cover and why
- Author standards: credentials, expertise required of contributors
- Research and fact-checking: sources used, review by subject matter experts
- Update policy: how often content is reviewed, how errors are corrected
- Conflict of interest: advertising, affiliate relationships, funding sources
- Link to this page from your About page, site footer, and individual article bylines.
- Name specific authors with credentials rather than using "Editorial Team" as a generic author.
Explain
Google's Search Quality Rater Guidelines specifically look for editorial standards as part of evaluating a site's Trustworthiness. For YMYL topics especially, the absence of an editorial policy is a clear signal to quality raters that the site cannot be trusted to publish accurate, expert-reviewed content, leading to lower quality ratings and reduced search visibility.
Code Review
Check the site's footer links, About page, and individual article templates for a link to an editorial policy page. Verify the editorial policy URL returns a 200 status code and that the page contains substantive content — not just a boilerplate paragraph — covering research methodology, author qualifications, and correction policies.
For full implementation details, code examples, and framework-specific guidance,
see references/rule.md.
Rule page: https://frontendchecklist.io/en/rules/seo/editorial-policy