Official statement
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- 43:04 Subdomain or Subdirectory: Which URL Structure Should You Choose for a Multilingual Site?
- 44:44 Do URLs with parameters rank as well as clean URLs?
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Google's Change of Address Tool is not designed for consolidating multiple domains into one site. It is meant solely for transferring signals from an old domain to a new one, not for aggregating signals from multiple sources. Using this tool to merge multiple domains may lead to unpredictable effects on ranking and indexing.
What you need to understand
What exactly is the Change of Address Tool?
The Search Console offers a tool specifically dedicated to site migrations: the Change of Address Tool. Its initial role? To inform Google that a Domain A has permanently moved to a Domain B.
This is not just a simple gadget. The tool accelerates the transfer of ranking signals, accumulated trust, and crawl budget. Without it, Google must discover and interpret the 301 redirects by itself, which takes time — sometimes several weeks.
Why does the idea of merging multiple domains sound appealing?
On paper, it's tempting. Imagine three secondary domains with strong backlinks but little traffic. If we could “merge” them into a main domain using the tool, we would theoretically add all the positive signals — authority, links, history.
Except that Google clearly states: this is not the intended use. The tool was designed for a 1-to-1 transfer, not to aggregate multiple sources. The problem? Signals do not add up like points in a video game.
What are the real risks of misusing it?
Google speaks of “unexpected effects,” a common phrase when the algorithm detects non-standard behavior. Concretely, this could mean a temporary loss of visibility, confusion in indexing, or worse — a dilution of signals instead of a consolidation.
The algorithm is not calibrated to handle multiple source domains pointing to one with this tool. It may interpret this as an attempt to manipulate or simply mishandle cascading redirects. The result: the main site could lose ground instead of gaining it.
- The Change of Address Tool is intended for 1-to-1 transfers, not multi-domain consolidation.
- SEO signals do not mechanically add up — they either transfer or dilute depending on the context.
- Using the tool outside its intended purpose exposes you to unpredictable effects on ranking.
- Google implicitly recommends using classic 301 redirects for complex mergers.
- Patience is your best ally during a migration: allowing Google to interpret redirects naturally avoids surprises.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices?
Yes, and it’s even reassuring. In practice, multi-domain migrations to a main domain have been done for years without the Change of Address Tool — solely with well-structured 301s. And it works, as long as a logical page-to-page mapping is respected.
What Google is telling us here is that the tool does not replace the basic mechanics of redirects. It accelerates it, that’s all. Wanting to use it as a “merger booster” stems from a misunderstanding of its role. The tool informs; it does not decide the distribution of signals.
What nuances should be added to this position?
The phrase “unexpected effects” remains vague. Google does not say that this is strictly forbidden, nor that it will trigger a penalty. It says that the algorithm's behavior becomes unpredictable. An important nuance: this suggests that there is no anti-spam filter that activates, but rather an algorithmic gray area.
Some SEOs have attempted this maneuver and report variable results — some experienced a smooth transfer, while others saw a drastic drop. [To be verified]: No large-scale study precisely documents these cases; it remains anecdotal. What is certain: Google does not guarantee anything outside of the official use.
In what cases could this rule be bypassed?
Technically, nothing prevents you from configuring the tool for multiple source domains. But the question is not “is it possible?”, it’s “is it prudent?”. If you manage a brand with multiple domain variants (e.g., .fr, .com, .net) all pointing to the same content, you are already in a borderline case where the tool could theoretically be used multiple times.
Even then, it’s better to proceed in sequential steps: one domain at a time, with several weeks in between. Wanting to merge everything simultaneously risks Google misinterpreting the maneuver and mixing the signals. The result: confusion in the index, possible URL cannibalization, temporary or lasting ranking loss.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done for a standard migration?
For a 1-to-1 transfer (old-site.com → new-site.com), the Change of Address Tool is your ally. Configure it after setting up all your 301 redirects, not before. Google must already see the active redirects to validate the change of address.
Ensure that both properties (old and new domain) are verified in Search Console. The tool will not function if you are not a verified owner of both. Once activated, monitor the coverage reports: the indexing transfer should be gradual but constant.
What mistakes should be avoided during a multi-domain merger?
The temptation to use the tool for each source domain is understandable but dangerous. If you are merging domain-A.com, domain-B.com, and domain-C.com into principal.com, configure the tool only once — for the most strategic source domain, the one that has the most traffic and authority.
For the others, let the 301 redirects do the work alone. Google will eventually understand the structure, but without risking algorithmic confusion. And above all: never activate multiple “Change of Address” tools simultaneously towards the same target domain. This is exactly the scenario Google qualifies as “unintended use.”
How can you check if the transfer is going well?
After activating the tool, monitor two indicators in Search Console: the number of indexed pages on the old domain (should decrease) and on the new one (should increase). If you observe stagnation or a drop on both, it’s a bad sign — Google is not transferring correctly.
On the organic traffic side, expect a temporary volatility of 2 to 6 weeks. This is normal. However, if after 8 weeks you are still 30% below the initial traffic, there’s a problem — incomplete mapping, cascading redirects, or confusion in the index. Audit line by line.
- Set up all 301 redirects before using the Change of Address Tool.
- Validate both properties (old and new domain) in Search Console.
- Use the tool only for a 1-to-1 transfer, never for a multi-source merger.
- Monitor the evolution of indexing via the coverage reports for at least 8 weeks.
- Never configure multiple Change of Address tools simultaneously towards the same target domain.
- Document the page-to-page mapping to be able to quickly correct if any URLs are misdirected.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on utiliser l'outil de changement d'adresse pour fusionner deux domaines ?
Que se passe-t-il si on configure l'outil pour plusieurs domaines sources ?
Les redirections 301 suffisent-elles sans l'outil de changement d'adresse ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une migration soit complète ?
Peut-on annuler un changement d'adresse si la migration échoue ?
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