Official statement
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Google claims that 301 redirects transfer all signals to the new URL, including when the old one had parameters. For SEO, this means that a well-executed migration should theoretically result in no ranking loss. It remains to be seen in practice if this full transmission occurs in all contexts, especially during massive migrations or deep structural changes.
What you need to understand
What exactly does 'all signals' mean in this statement?
When Google refers to 'all signals', it theoretically encompasses PageRank, domain age, inbound links and their anchors, accumulated behavioral signals, and potentially content quality metrics. In other words, the new URL inherits everything that the old one built over time.
This statement also applies to URLs with parameters — a point often overlooked during migrations. If you redirect example.com/product?id=123&color=red to example.com/red-product-123, Google promises to transfer all signals acquired by the parameter URL, even if it was considered 'technical' or 'duplicate content'.
Why has Google been emphasizing this complete transfer for a few years?
Historically, SEOs dreaded a 'loss of juice' during a 301, with mystical figures circulating (10-15% loss). Google has gradually adjusted its stance to encourage clean migrations and prevent webmasters from keeping outdated URLs for fear of losing ranking.
This clarification also serves to simplify redesign or domain change processes. Google wants you to make the leap without hesitation — provided, of course, that the redirect is properly configured and that the target content remains relevant to the old one.
In what context does this rule apply without exception?
For the transfer to be optimal, several conditions must be met: the redirect must be permanent (301), point to equivalent or superior content, and be in place long enough for Googlebot to recrawl and consolidate the signals. If you redirect a product page to the homepage, Google will interpret this as a soft 404 and will transfer nothing.
The consolidation time varies: a few days for a frequently crawled site, several weeks for a site with a low crawl budget. During this period, ranking fluctuations are normal, even if Google claims that no signals are lost — reindexing takes time.
- Full transfer of PageRank and link signals via permanent 301
- Identical functioning for URLs with parameters
- Need for content equivalence between old and new URLs
- Progressive consolidation over several days to weeks depending on crawl budget
- Avoid redirects to generic pages or homepages to prevent soft 404
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
For well-prepared migrations with rigorous 1:1 mapping, yes — rankings stabilize quickly without visible loss. However, as soon as we touch the structure (merging categories, changing hierarchy, consolidating URLs), observations diverge. Fluctuations can persist for several months, and some sites do indeed lose organic traffic.
Google does not explicitly state that the context of the new URL is unimportant. If you redirect a deep page to a URL better positioned in the hierarchy, or vice versa, the transfer of signals can be affected by the new internal architecture signals. [To be verified] if Google weighs the transfer according to the internal linking post-migration.
What nuances should be added to this promise of total transfer?
First point: Google talks about signals, not ranking results. Even with all signals transferred, if the new page loads slower, has a different internal linking structure, or rephrased content, the ranking can change. The full transfer of signals does not guarantee the same ranking.
Second point: chain redirects (A → B → C) work, but Google recommends avoiding more than 2-3 hops. Beyond that, the crawl budget fragments and consolidation takes longer. On very large sites, this can become problematic if thousands of URLs are redirected in cascade.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
If the redirect points to irrelevant or generic content, Google sees this as a soft 404 and transfers nothing. This is common when mass deleting products where everything is redirected to the homepage or a vague parent category.
Another edge case: temporary redirects (302) do not transmit signals in the same way. Google has confirmed that a 302 can become permanent if it remains in place for a long time, but in the meantime, the old URL remains indexed and the signals do not migrate. Let's be honest — many sites still use 302s due to technical errors, and wonder why their migration fails.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do during a migration or redesign?
Establish a precise URL mapping: each old URL must have a clear destination, ideally equivalent in content and hierarchical level. Avoid redirects to the homepage or overly generic category pages — this is the classic trap that turns your 301s into soft 404s.
Test your redirects before going live with a tool like Screaming Frog in 'list' mode: load your old URLs, check that each 301 points to the right target, without excessive chains. A post-migration audit is essential to detect configuration errors (302 instead of 301, loops, multiple chains).
How to monitor the transfer of signals after migration?
Track indexing changes in Google Search Console: the old domain or old URLs should gradually disappear from the index in favor of the new ones. If old URLs remain indexed after several weeks, it means Google is hesitating — check your redirects and your sitemap file.
Monitor organic traffic fluctuations page by page, not just overall. A global decline can hide winning pages and others in free fall. If certain pages lose traffic despite well-configured 301s, it’s often that the content or internal linking has changed unfavorably.
What mistakes should you avoid to retain the benefits of the redirect?
Never delete your redirects too early. Google recommends keeping them for at least a year — ideally indefinitely if you have quality backlinks pointing to the old URLs. The server cost of a redirect table is trivial compared to the risk of losing PageRank.
Avoid temporary redirects (302, 307) for permanent changes. If you're unsure between 301 and 302, ask yourself: ‘Am I going back to the old URL?’ If the answer is no, use a 301 without hesitation.
- Create a complete mapping old URL → new URL before any migration
- Use exclusively permanent 301s for permanent changes
- Ensure there are no redirect chains (max 2-3 hops)
- Test redirects in pre-production with Screaming Frog or equivalent
- Monitor indexing and traffic page by page post-migration for at least 3 months
- Keep redirects for at least a year, ideally indefinitely
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une redirection 301 fait-elle perdre du PageRank ou du jus SEO ?
Faut-il rediriger les URLs avec paramètres lors d'une migration ?
Combien de temps faut-il maintenir les redirections 301 en place ?
Peut-on rediriger plusieurs anciennes URLs vers une seule nouvelle URL ?
Les chaînes de redirections (A → B → C) posent-elles problème ?
🎥 From the same video 42
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 996h50 · published on 12/03/2021
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