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If I've got 2 (or more) URLs (where the only difference is the hash value) to my homepage will Google divide my page rank between those pages or is it 'safe' to have lots of different hashes in the URL and still keep one page rank?

Example:

http://example.com/
http://example.com/#hash
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6 Answers

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I suspect Google ignores hashes entirely, as they are meaningless in a search indexing context.

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It seems that what you're suspecting is true. I simply used a page rank lookup tool and compared the results of the same URL with and without a URL hash and the score was identical. Thank you. – Mattias Apr 20 at 15:06
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I would imagine it would help but in a trivial way. It would just add more value to your urls and give your pages some semantic meanings if done properly, which I feel really helps SEO. I don't think Google will separate your rank because of these. We just don't know what google uses for all of its pagerank.

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There are, of course, no hard and fast rules for what will help or hurt, because each search engine can rank things however it sees fit. Your best bets are to look at the engines you're most concerned with, and to target them specifically. There is plenty of information on how to do this.

I would hazard an educated guess (but still a guess) that Google is smart enough that they won't "divide" your relevance up among all of the hashed anchors you have.

I would also surmise that it could well help, because search engines tend to look fondly upon urls that point to their content with meaningful, readable words.

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vote up 1 vote down

I would expect that Google is clever enough to ignore bookmarks (bits after the #).

It might be worth reading up on Specifying canonical URLs as well, as this allows you to specify a preferred version of a URL where the URI and/or query string vary.

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The way that I see it, is that you've shown 2 URLs, that both point to the same page.

Now, considering that Google searches for pages containing the given search criteria, the bookmark part of the URL would seem to be irrelevant to search results. This leads me to suspect that the ranking would not be 'split between the pages', because there is only one page.

To summarise, I'd concur with ceejayoz.

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Just curious ... are these actually named anchors on the page, or are you using the hash syntax to provide virtual "page" URLs to a Flash application?

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