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Official statement

Using canonical tags across multiple domains (e.g., 25 thematic stores pointing to a main store) is technically correct. It avoids duplicate content but may redistribute SEO strength among the domains, potentially diminishing the visibility of the thematic sites.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 53:08 💬 EN 📅 29/10/2020 ✂ 26 statements
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Other statements from this video 25
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  4. 14:10 Should you really avoid setting all your outbound links to nofollow?
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  7. 20:01 Why does blocking robots.txt prevent noindex from working?
  8. 22:03 Are Core Web Vitals really the only speed criterion that counts for ranking?
  9. 23:03 Core Web Vitals: Why does Google ignore other performance metrics for Page Experience?
  10. 25:15 Do PageSpeed tests really mislead you about your Core Web Vitals?
  11. 26:50 Is alt text truly crucial for your visibility in Google Images?
  12. 26:50 Does alternative text for images really enhance SEO?
  13. 28:26 Do 302 redirects really pass as much PageRank as 301s?
  14. 30:17 Should you really hide cookie consent banners from Googlebot?
  15. 30:57 Should you really block cookie banners for Googlebot?
  16. 34:46 Why does Google still display old content in your meta descriptions?
  17. 34:46 Why does Google sometimes show your old meta descriptions in the SERPs?
  18. 36:57 Should you really show cookie banners to Googlebot?
  19. 37:56 Do 302 redirects really turn into 301s over time?
  20. 40:01 Should you really return a 404 for products that are permanently unavailable?
  21. 40:01 Should you return a 404 or a 200 on a product page that's out of stock?
  22. 43:37 Should you sync visible and technical dates to enhance your crawl?
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

John Mueller confirms that pointing canonical tags from multiple thematic domains to a main site is technically valid and avoids duplicate content. However, this practice redistributes SEO strength: the ranking signals (backlinks, authority, history) from the source sites are concentrated towards the target, at the expense of their own visibility. Consequently, your thematic stores may lose their acquired positions while the main site gains power.

What you need to understand

What does a cross-domain canonical actually mean in this context?

A canonical tag indicates to Google which version of a page should be indexed when multiple URLs display identical or very similar content. When this tag points to a different domain, it is referred to as a cross-domain canonical.

In the scenario mentioned by Mueller, think of 25 specialized e-commerce stores (e.g., chaussures-running.fr, chaussures-trail.fr, etc.) that point their product listings to a main generalist store via canonical tags. Each product exists on multiple domains, but Google is invited to consider only one canonical version: that of the main site.

Why does this setup redistribute SEO strength?

Google treats the canonical as a strong consolidation signal. The source pages (the 25 stores) explicitly declare that they are not the reference — they delegate this authority to the target page. As a result, the ranking signals accumulated by these pages (backlinks pointing to them, user engagement, domain age) are progressively transferred to the main domain.

This mechanism effectively avoids duplicate content — Google indexes only one version — but it creates a communicating vessels effect. The thematic stores stop receiving organic traffic on these products since they are no longer indexed. Their SEO visibility erodes while the main site concentrates all the power.

In which cases does this strategy make sense?

This approach is not absurd if your business objective is to sacrifice the visibility of satellite sites to boost a primary asset. For instance: you have launched 25 micro-themed sites to test niches, and you now want to consolidate all the traffic onto a premium umbrella brand.

On the other hand, if each thematic store has a reason to exist independently (distinct positioning, specific audience, independent business model), this configuration is counterproductive. You kill sources of qualified traffic for a hypothetical gain on the main site.

  • Cross-domain canonical = strong consolidation signal towards a target domain
  • SEO signals (backlinks, authority, engagement) are redirected to the canonical page, not duplicated
  • Source pages lose their indexing and therefore their direct organic traffic
  • This strategy only makes sense if you want to sacrifice the visibility of satellites in favor of a primary asset
  • Google treats this canonical as a strong instruction, not just a suggestion

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?

Yes, and it’s even one of the rare cases where Mueller is surprisingly transparent. Tests do show that cross-domain canonicals lead to SEO cannibalization: source domains progressively lose their positions, sometimes in just a few weeks if crawling is intensive.

What is less clear is the reversibility of the process. If you remove the canonical tags after several months, how long does it take for the source sites to regain their authority? Mueller doesn’t say. [To be verified]: Google Search Console data does not allow precise quantification of this signal redistribution, so you are navigating in the dark.

What nuances should be added to this recommendation?

The statement assumes that the 25 thematic sites have strictly identical content to the main site. However, in reality, even if the product listings are similar, there are often contextual variations: descriptions tailored to the niche, specific internal linking, complementary editorial content.

In this case, using a cross-domain canonical amounts to wasting SEO potential. You tell Google to ignore pages that could rank for niche queries where the main site is not competitive. Sometimes it would be better to let both versions coexist, even if this creates a theoretical risk of duplicate content — which Google is managing better and better without manual intervention.

In what contexts does this configuration become risky?

If your thematic sites already have a solid SEO history (quality backlinks, established traffic, niche authority), switching to cross-domain canonical is a dangerous gamble. You bet that the overall gain on the main site will compensate for the losses on the satellites. But there is no guarantee that Google transfers 100% of the authority — some signals may get lost in the transition.

Another critical point: if the main site does not have the technical and editorial capacity to absorb this consolidation (poorly thought-out architecture, generic content, mediocre UX), you risk losing across the board. The thematic sites die, and the main one stagnates. Let’s be honest: this strategy only makes sense if the target site is already a well-oiled SEO machine.

Warning: Switching to cross-domain canonical is not easily reversible. Once Google has de-indexed the source pages and redistributed the authority, going back can take months — with a net loss in the meantime. Test first on a subset of products before generalizing.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you check before deploying cross-domain canonicals?

Start with an audit of your business objectives. If each thematic site has a strategic reason to exist (distinct brand, specific audience, independent monetization), a cross-domain canonical risks sabotaging this logic. Conversely, if these sites are merely SEO experiments that you now want to consolidate, the strategy is defensible.

Then, measure the potential traffic impact. Export Search Console data from each source domain: how many clicks do the pages you plan to canonicalize generate? If it’s marginal, the risk is limited. If it’s significant, you need to ensure that the main site can compensate for these losses — and that it is already ranking for the same queries.

How to deploy this configuration without breaking everything?

Never switch all of your sites at once. Test first on a restricted segment: a product category, a specific thematic domain. Allow Google to recrawl for 4 to 6 weeks, then compare performance in Search Console. If the overall traffic (main domain + satellites) remains stable or increases, you can expand.

Technically, ensure the canonical tag is properly in place in the <head> of each source page and that it points to an exact, accessible URL on the target domain. Google ignores canonicals that point to 404s, chain redirects, or pages blocked by robots.txt. Also, check that the content of both pages is sufficiently similar for Google to accept the canonical — otherwise it may ignore it.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this type of configuration?

Classic error: deploying cross-domain canonicals while the main site has unresolved technical issues (catastrophic load times, shaky silo structure, internal duplicate content). You will concentrate traffic on a platform that cannot convert it — a net loss.

Another trap: forgetting to monitor backlinks. If your thematic sites have accumulated quality inbound links, these links do not disappear when you switch to canonical. But their SEO value will be redirected to the main domain. If some links are contextual and point to niche-specific content, this redirection may seem inconsistent to Google — and dilute the effectiveness of the signal.

  • Audit your business objectives: does each site have a strategic reason to exist independently?
  • Measure the current traffic of pages to be canonicalized to assess the risk of loss
  • Test first on a restricted segment (a category, a domain) before generalizing
  • Ensure that canonical tags point to valid, accessible URLs with similar content
  • Monitor backlinks from source domains to anticipate the impact of their redirection
  • Ensure that the main site has the technical and editorial capacity to absorb the consolidated traffic
The cross-domain canonical is a powerful yet destructive tool: it consolidates SEO authority on one domain at the expense of others. This strategy only makes sense if your objective is explicitly to sacrifice the visibility of satellite sites to boost a primary asset — and that the latter is already technically solid. In all other cases, you risk losing net traffic without tangible gain. This type of strategic arbitration is complex and requires thorough analysis of your SEO ecosystem. If you are unsure of the way forward, consulting a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and assist in modeling impacts before deployment.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un canonical cross-domain transfère-t-il 100 % de l'autorité SEO vers le domaine cible ?
Google ne garantit pas un transfert total. Certains signaux peuvent se perdre dans la transition, notamment si les contenus ne sont pas strictement identiques ou si le site cible a des problèmes techniques. C'est un pari, pas une certitude.
Peut-on utiliser des canonical cross-domain dans les deux sens entre deux domaines ?
Techniquement oui, mais c'est incohérent et Google risque d'ignorer les deux signaux. Un canonical est une délégation d'autorité : A dit que B est la référence, B ne peut pas dire simultanément que A l'est. Choisissez un seul sens.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google prenne en compte un canonical cross-domain ?
Cela dépend de la fréquence de crawl de vos sites. En général, comptez 2 à 6 semaines pour observer les premiers effets dans Search Console (désindexation progressive des pages sources, montée du site cible). Les impacts complets peuvent prendre 2 à 3 mois.
Si je supprime les canonical tags après quelques mois, mes sites sources récupèrent-ils leur visibilité ?
Pas instantanément. Google doit recrawler les pages, réindexer les versions sources et redistribuer les signaux. Ce processus peut prendre plusieurs mois, avec une période de flottement où vous perdez du trafic des deux côtés. La réversibilité n'est pas garantie à 100 %.
Canonical cross-domain vs redirection 301 : quelle différence en termes SEO ?
Une 301 redirige l'utilisateur et consolide définitivement les URL. Un canonical garde les deux pages accessibles mais dit à Google d'indexer seulement la cible. La 301 est plus radicale et irréversible côté utilisateur ; le canonical préserve l'accès direct mais affaiblit le SEO des sources.
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 53 min · published on 29/10/2020

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