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Official statement

Links between a main domain and its subdomains are normal and are generally not considered spam.
34:49
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h02 💬 EN 📅 01/12/2017 ✂ 14 statements
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📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that links between a main domain and its subdomains are normal and do not trigger spam filters. This clarification validates a common practice in web architecture. However, the cautious phrasing ('generally') leaves some ambiguity regarding clear cases of abuse or over-optimization.

What you need to understand

Why does Google state this position on domain/subdomain links?

This statement addresses a recurring question among SEO practitioners: should links between example.com and blog.example.com be treated like classic internal links, or as potentially suspicious external backlinks? The confusion arises because Google treats subdomains technically as distinct entities in some contexts (crawl budget, indexing), while linking them to the same root domain for other calculations.

Mueller clarifies that this architecture is not penalizing in itself. Sites that segment their content by subdomains (blog, support, shop) can create cross-links without fear of being downgraded for manipulation. This confirmation alleviates the pressure on multi-subdomain architectures, which are common in large e-commerce sites or SaaS platforms.

What does "generally" mean in this statement?

The term "generally" is a classic warning signal in Google's communications: it introduces an undocumented exception. This means there are cases where these links might be misinterpreted. The boundary is not specified, but it can be assumed that hundreds of subdomains created solely to generate artificial backlinks to the main domain would cross the red line.

The other interpretation concerns the anchor text and context. A natural link between blog.example.com and example.com will have a coherent editorial anchor. A forced link with repeated exact commercial anchor text 50 times could trigger a manual reevaluation. Google does not provide a numerical threshold, leaving a margin of interpretation for its quality teams.

How does Google technically distinguish between domains and subdomains?

Historically, Google has swung in its treatment of subdomains. In some algorithms (like crawl budget distribution), each subdomain may be treated as an almost independent entity. For other signals (notably the overall reputation of the root domain), they share part of the authority.

Concretely, a link from blog.example.com to example.com does not have the same value as a link from othersite.com. It is closer to an internal link, but retains a cross-domain dimension in the logs. This ambiguity explains why the question arises regularly: the actual behavior of the algorithm is not binary.

  • Domain/subdomain links are normal according to Google and do not trigger spam filters by default
  • The word "generally" introduces an undocumented exception for clear cases of abuse
  • Google treats subdomains in a hybrid manner: partially independent, partially tied to the root domain
  • The anchor text and volume remain decisive: natural editorial links perform better than repetitive commercial anchors
  • This clarification validates common multi-subdomain architectures (blog, support, shop) without intrinsic SEO risk

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

In practice, it is indeed observed that well-established sites using subdomains (like Spotify, GitHub, Medium) do not face any penalties for their cross-links. Ranking signals indicate that these links transmit juice but with lower weighting than a genuine external backlink. This aligns with Mueller's position.

However, there have been cases of downgrading affecting sites that artificially created dozens of subdomains solely to boost the main domain's authority. Google does not publicly label them as spam, but the affected sites saw their organic traffic plummet drastically following core updates. [To be verified]: Google has never confirmed whether these drops were due to inter-subdomain links or other correlated low-quality signals.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First point: Mueller mentions "normal" links. This term remains subjective. A systematic footer link from every page of blog.example.com to example.com with the anchor "best CRM" is not "normal" in an editorial sense, even if it is technically allowed. Normality is assessed based on expected user behavior, not solely on the absence of an automatic penalty.

Second nuance: this tolerance does not extend to third-party hosted subdomains. If you create client1.yourplatform.com for each client and all link to yourplatform.com, you are in a gray area. Google could interpret this as a link scheme, even if these are technically your subdomains. Actual editorial ownership matters more than mere DNS ownership.

In what cases might this rule not apply?

If your subdomain is manually penalized (spam, thin content), outgoing links to the main domain could be devalued or ignored, potentially contaminating the overall reputation. Google has previously confirmed that manual actions can affect the entire root domain if the abuse is systemic.

Another edge case: redirector subdomains. Some sites create tracking.example.com that redirects to example.com after passing through an intermediate page. If these subdomains accumulate suspicious external links, Google may treat them as separate entities and isolate the problem, but also devalue the whole if the pattern is repeated.

Note: The phrasing "generally not considered spam" is not an absolute guarantee. It indicates that Google reserves the right to evaluate on a case-by-case basis, particularly during manual reviews or algorithm updates targeting link manipulation.

Practical impact and recommendations

What practical steps should you take with this information?

If you are already using subdomains to segment your site (blog, support, docs), you can create natural editorial links between them without worry. Favor contextual anchors in the body of the text rather than systematic footers. A link like "Discover our comprehensive solution at example.com" from an article on blog.example.com is perfectly legitimate.

For new projects, this clarification allows you to freely choose between subdomains and subdirectories without the internal linking criterion being restrictive. Subdomains remain relevant if you need technical separation (distinct hosting, different technology stack, management of autonomous teams).

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Do not create multiple identical subdomains with duplicate content just to multiply the linking points to the main domain. This is exactly the type of behavior that could tip your case from "generally not" to "considered spam." Google easily detects large-scale duplication patterns.

Also, avoid repeated over-optimized anchors. If every article on blog.example.com contains 3 links to example.com with the same commercial anchors, you create an artificial signal. Vary the formulations, use brand anchors or naked URLs, and above all link only when it's useful for the user.

How can you check if your architecture is compliant?

Audit your server logs and Search Console to identify if Google crawls your subdomains consistently. A subdomain that is ignored or poorly crawled may signal an internal linking issue or content quality problem. Also, ensure that each subdomain has its own XML sitemap declared in Search Console.

Analyze the link profile between your domains/subdomains with Ahrefs or Majestic. An abnormal ratio (99% of links from the subdomain pointing to the main domain, zero in the other direction) may seem suspicious. A balanced bidirectional linking structure is more natural and reflects a true editorial complementarity.

  • Use varied contextual anchors, never systematically identical
  • Create links only when they provide real user value
  • Avoid artificially multiplying subdomains without editorial or technical justification
  • Declare each subdomain in Search Console with its own sitemap
  • Regularly audit the crawl budget and indexing of each subdomain
  • Ensure your subdomains have unique, high-quality content, not duplicates
Links between the main domain and subdomains are validated by Google under normal usage. You can structure your architecture freely, as long as you adhere to good editorial practices: contextual links, varied anchors, user value. Remain vigilant about the word "generally," which leaves the door open for cases of abuse. If your multi-subdomain architecture becomes complex or if you wish to finely optimize the linking structure and authority distribution, consulting with a specialized SEO agency can help you devise a robust and compliant long-term strategy.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les liens d'un sous-domaine vers le domaine principal ont-ils la même valeur qu'un backlink classique ?
Non, ils sont traités davantage comme du maillage interne renforcé. Ils transmettent du jus de lien mais avec une pondération inférieure à un véritable backlink externe provenant d'un domaine tiers indépendant.
Puis-je créer autant de sous-domaines que je veux pour booster mon SEO ?
Techniquement oui, mais Google se réserve le droit de dévaluer ou pénaliser les schémas manifestement artificiels. La multiplication sans justification éditoriale ou technique risque d'être interprétée comme de la manipulation.
Faut-il éviter les liens footer systématiques entre sous-domaines et domaine principal ?
Pas nécessairement, mais privilégiez des liens contextuels dans le contenu. Un footer avec lien de marque reste acceptable, mais répéter des ancrages commerciaux optimisés dans chaque footer devient suspect.
Les sous-domaines partagent-ils la même autorité de domaine que le domaine principal ?
Partiellement. Google maintient une réputation globale au niveau du domaine racine, mais chaque sous-domaine peut aussi être évalué séparément pour certains signaux comme la qualité du contenu ou le crawl budget.
Que se passe-t-il si un de mes sous-domaines reçoit une pénalité manuelle ?
La pénalité peut rester isolée au sous-domaine concerné, mais si l'abus est systémique ou que le pattern se répète, Google peut étendre l'action au domaine racine. Les liens depuis ce sous-domaine seront dévalués ou ignorés.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Penalties & Spam

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