| name | seo-international |
| description | Audit and generate hreflang annotations for multilingual sites — check reciprocity, BCP-47 validity, self-reference, x-default, hreflang/canonical conflicts, and <html lang> agreement, and emit reciprocal hreflang link sets. Module M20 (conditional). Feeds the Search SEO score. |
| allowed-tools | Read, Grep, Glob, WebFetch, Bash |
seo-international (M20)
hreflang tells search engines which language/region URL to serve. This module is conditional: it only runs when seo-vertical-detect flags a multilingual site (multiple lang/locale URLs, language switcher, or existing hreflang). On monolingual sites every finding is not_applicable at severity 0. Schema-type concerns defer to references/schema-tier1.md; this module owns link-level localization only.
Audits
Working from the PageSnapshot (rendered_dom if present, else raw_html). Read hreflang from <link rel="alternate" hreflang="..."> in <head> (also accept HTTP Link: headers / sitemap xhtml:link when present):
- Reciprocity — if page A declares an alternate B, B must declare A back. One-way hreflang is ignored by Google.
- BCP-47 validity — each
hreflang value is a valid language (en) or language-region (en-GB, pt-BR) tag; region is ISO-3166-1 alpha-2, not a country-of-language guess (en-UK is invalid; use en-GB).
- Self-reference — the page lists itself in its own hreflang set.
- x-default — at least one
hreflang="x-default" for the language-selector / fallback URL.
- hreflang↔canonical conflict — an hreflang URL must be self-canonical; pointing hreflang at a URL whose
rel=canonical is a different page neutralizes the cluster (cross-check M2/seo-indexability).
<html lang> agreement — the document lang attribute matches the locale this URL targets in its own hreflang entry.
Fixes
- AUTO (
fixable: auto): when the locale→URL map is known (supplied by the user, a sitemap, or discovered alternates), generate a complete reciprocal hreflang link set — every locale + a single x-default — as a <head> diff for fix. Additive and deterministic.
- PROPOSED (
fixable: proposed): a partial set inferred from discovered alternates that needs the user to confirm the locale map before write.
- ADVISORY (
fixable: advisory): "this looks multilingual but no locale map exists" — never written by the tool.
- Never fabricate locales, region codes, or alternate URLs. If the map is incomplete, leave a clearly-marked
TODO(locale) placeholder and ask the user.
Verification
- Offline:
node ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/../../scripts/hreflang-check.mjs --url <u> — parses the alternate set, validates BCP-47 tags, and checks reciprocity/self-reference/x-default across the discovered cluster.
- Reciprocity requires fetching each declared alternate; when those URLs (or a sitemap tier) are unavailable, status is
needs_api, never a false pass.
Findings
Findings conform to schema/finding.schema.json. On a confirmed multilingual site severity is 4; otherwise the check is not_applicable at severity 0. Examples:
M20.hreflang.missing_reciprocal — page declares hreflang="de-DE" for a URL that does not point back (status: fail, severity 4, fixable: proposed, axis search, confidence established). evidence.observed quotes the one-way <link>; verification.reproduce runs the hreflang-check command above.
M20.hreflang.invalid_bcp47 — hreflang="en-UK" (fail, severity 4, fixable: auto, axis search, confidence established; recommend en-GB).
M20.hreflang.missing_xdefault — cluster has no x-default fallback (warn, severity 4, fixable: auto, axis search, confidence directional).
M20.hreflang.not_applicable — monolingual site (not_applicable, severity 0).
Honesty
- hreflang is a targeting/clustering signal, not a ranking boost: it selects which existing URL to show in a locale, it does not raise rankings. Don't sell it as a ranking lever.
- hreflang does not fix thin or machine-translated content, and it is not a substitute for
rel=canonical — the two work together.
- Bing/Yandex use it weakly to not-at-all; the documented beneficiary is Google. Don't claim cross-engine parity.