Core Web Vitals Explained (in Plain English)

Core Web Vitals are three metrics Google uses to measure how good a page feels to use — and they influence your rankings. They sound technical, but the idea is simple: fast, stable, responsive pages win. Here is what each one means and how to improve it.

LCP — Largest Contentful Paint (loading)

How long the main content takes to appear. A good LCP is under about 2.5 seconds. The usual culprits are large images and slow hosting — see website speed optimisation.

INP — Interaction to Next Paint (responsiveness)

How quickly the page responds when someone clicks or taps. Sluggish response usually comes from heavy scripts. Trimming unnecessary code keeps it snappy.

CLS — Cumulative Layout Shift (stability)

Whether things jump around as the page loads — the annoying moment where a button moves just as you tap it. Reserving space for images and ads keeps the layout stable.

Why they matter

Google uses Core Web Vitals as a ranking signal, and they map directly to how visitors experience your site. Better vitals mean better rankings and higher conversion — a rare win-win. Check yours in Google Search Console or Google PageSpeed Insights.

Frequently asked questions

How do I check my Core Web Vitals?

Free tools like Google PageSpeed Insights and Search Console report them for your pages.

Do Core Web Vitals really affect rankings?

Yes, they are part of Google page experience signals, and they strongly affect conversion regardless.

What is the fastest win?

Usually image optimisation and caching, which improve loading the most for the least effort.

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Written by Dale Martin

Dale Martin is the founder of Pipeline Plan, where he builds high-converting B2B websites and automation systems for Australian businesses.