If you withdraw content, it will still be on GOV.UK but will not appear in internal search results. Withdrawn content will appear beneath a call-out box which tells the user it has been withdrawn and is no longer current.
Guidance formats should be edited and updated when they become out of date. Do not create a new content item unless theres a new and distinct user need for it.
Other content items, especially time-bound pages such as news articles, press releases and newsletters, can be withdrawn when theyre no longer current (for example, if theyre over a year old).
You should withdraw expired schemes and services too, or policy papers that arent current or relevant. If you have policy papers that are mostly correct, but link to an expired scheme or service, edit the page to update it and remove the link.
The history mode notices will appear higher on pages that were published under a former government, but have also been withdrawn.
A broad test to keep in mind when deciding to withdraw a content item is, will leaving it as it is get in the way of a non-specialist user? For example, an old policy announcement about a benefit thats appearing in search above the guide on how to claim that benefit.
Find out how to withdraw content.
Consultations
Consultations are an important part of the policy-creation process, and are useful to people who scrutinise government. Do not withdraw them unless you know that a subsequent consultation directly supersedes an existing one.
Frequent infrastructure plan changes
Withdraw content items that show an earlier iteration of a plan, such as old plans for the HS2 train line route. Withdraw everything but the most up to date plans.
Include a link to a collection that includes the most up to date version, rather than an individual publication page. By linking to a collection, your link will always lead to a canonical list of up to date plans.