An SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) certificate is a digital certificate that authenticates a website's identity and enables an encrypted, secure connection between a user's browser and the web server. When a site has an SSL certificate properly installed, it serves content over HTTPS (HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure) rather than HTTP, and browsers display a padlock icon in the address bar. SSL is technically an older term — the protocol has been superseded by TLS (Transport Layer Security) — but "SSL certificate" remains the widely used name for these security certificates.

SSL and SEO

Google confirmed HTTPS as a ranking signal in August 2014, describing it as a "lightweight" signal affecting fewer than 1% of queries at the time. Since then, HTTPS has become essentially a baseline requirement — Google's Chrome browser marks HTTP sites as "Not Secure," which significantly reduces user trust and can lead to higher bounce rates. For SEO, having HTTPS is necessary but not sufficient: it's a baseline that essentially every site should have. Sites migrating from HTTP to HTTPS must implement proper 301 redirects, update canonical tags, and resubmit sitemaps to avoid losing link equity and organic rankings during the transition.

Free SSL: SSL certificates are available for free through services like Let's Encrypt, which is supported by most hosting providers. There is no need to pay for a basic DV (Domain Validation) SSL certificate for most websites — free certificates provide the same encryption and HTTPS functionality.

Why It Matters for SEO

HTTPS via SSL certificate is a non-negotiable technical SEO requirement in the modern web:

  • Google uses HTTPS as a ranking signal — HTTP sites are at a minor but real disadvantage
  • Chrome's "Not Secure" label on HTTP sites increases bounce rates and erodes trust
  • HTTPS is required for HTTP/2 in most browsers, which improves page load performance
  • Many modern browser features (service workers, geolocation, push notifications) require HTTPS
  • Proper HTTP-to-HTTPS migration with 301 redirects preserves existing link equity