Official statement
Other statements from this video 25 ▾
- 2:16 Why do your Search Console data only tell part of the story?
- 3:40 Should you stop optimizing for impressions and clicks in SEO?
- 12:12 Is it true that mobile-first indexing completely overlooks your site's desktop version?
- 14:15 Why does the mobile-first indexing verification delay cause temporary discrepancies in Google’s index?
- 14:47 Should you show the same number of products on mobile and desktop for mobile-first indexing?
- 20:35 Can a minor redesign really trigger a Page Layout penalty?
- 23:12 Is it true that CLS isn't a ranking factor yet—should you still optimize it?
- 24:04 How does Google reassess a site's overall quality when the top pages remain well-ranked?
- 27:26 Do Links Without Anchor Text Really Hold Value for SEO?
- 29:02 Why do some pages take months to be reindexed after changes?
- 29:02 Should you really use sitemaps to speed up the indexing of your content?
- 31:06 Can an incomplete or outdated sitemap really harm your SEO?
- 33:45 Can you really host your XML sitemap on an external domain?
- 34:53 Does each language version really need its own self-referencing canonical?
- 37:58 Does structured breadcrumb really enhance your SEO ranking?
- 39:33 Do HTML breadcrumbs really enhance crawling and internal linking?
- 43:18 Are backlinks really less important than we think for ranking on Google?
- 44:22 Does Google really ignore hidden content instead of penalizing it?
- 45:22 Is it really necessary to be 'significantly better' to climb the SERPs?
- 47:29 Are URLs with # really invisible for Google SEO?
- 48:03 Do URL fragments really disrupt the indexing of JavaScript sites?
- 50:07 Do words in the URL really still have a true impact on Google rankings?
- 51:45 Is it really necessary to list every keyword variation for Google to understand your content?
- 55:33 Paired AMP: Is it really the regular HTML that matters for indexing?
- 61:49 Does a sudden drop in traffic always signal a quality issue?
Google states that neither domain age nor the CMS used are direct ranking factors. Practically, a site launched yesterday is not penalized compared to a 10-year-old competitor, and WordPress has no technical advantage over Wix or a proprietary CMS. What matters is the quality of the generated HTML and the ability to produce relevant content, not the tool or its age.
What you need to understand
Why is domain age often seen as an SEO advantage?
The confusion arises from a correlation observed in the field: old domains often rank better. But correlation is not causation. An older domain has generally accumulated backlinks, authority, and indexed content — that’s what weighs, not the registration date.
Google does not favor a site because it has existed for 15 years. It favors it because that site has had 15 years to build trust signals. The distinction is crucial: age is a proxy, not a direct lever.
Does the CMS really have zero impact on SEO?
Mueller is clear: Google reads the rendered HTML, not the CMS source code. Whether you use WordPress, Shopify, Wix, or a custom framework, only the final result matters: tags, structure, loading speed, mobile-friendliness.
Let’s be honest — some CMSs facilitate good practices (clean URLs, canonical tags, redirect management), while others complicate them. But technically, Google has no bias. A well-optimized Blogger site can outperform a poorly configured WordPress site.
What replaces age and CMS as performance criteria?
The real levers are: content quality, Core Web Vitals, technical architecture, backlinks. A new site can surpass an older competitor if it provides a better answer, loads faster, and earns natural links.
The CMS is a tool. It governs what you can do easily — not what Google will reward. A good developer can offset the limitations of a poor CMS; a bad setup can sabotage the best tool on the market.
- Domain age is not a direct ranking factor, but an older domain has often accumulated positive signals (backlinks, content history, trust)
- The CMS used does not affect ranking: Google only analyzes the generated HTML, regardless of the technical stack
- All modern CMSs produce acceptable HTML by default — the difference is made by the usage, not the tool
- The real SEO levers remain content, technique (speed, mobile, indexability), and backlinks
- A new site can outperform an old one if it excels in relevance, UX, and authority criteria
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes and no. In competitive queries, old domains still massively dominate. Not because Google favors them, but because they have capitalized on years of SEO. A new site can theoretically compete — but in practice, catching up 10 years of backlinks and indexed content is a marathon.
The issue is the supposed sandbox for new domains. Google denies its official existence, but many observe a delay before a brand new site performs fully. [To be checked] — this period might relate to the time needed to crawl, index, and evaluate the content, not to an explicit filter on age.
Does the choice of CMS really have zero indirect consequences?
Be careful with interpretation. Google does not penalize WordPress or Wix — but some CMSs impose technical constraints that degrade performance. A site builder that generates bloated code, limits 301 redirects, or restricts speed indirectly affects SEO.
Practically? A poorly chosen CMS can block you from critical optimizations: fine management of canonical tags, clean pagination, customizable URLs. Google doesn’t care about the CMS, but you should if your tool technically sabotages you.
When does this rule not fully apply?
In ultra-competitive markets (finance, insurance, health), domain history weighs heavily — not due to an algorithmic bias, but through accumulated authority. A new site takes years to break through, even with excellent content. The barrier to entry is not age; it’s the accumulated SEO capital.
For CMSs: if your tool generates heavy JavaScript poorly understood by Google, or produces series of indexing errors, you are at a real disadvantage. Google reads the rendered HTML, sure — but if that rendering is deficient, the CMS becomes an indirect burden.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you prioritize an expired old domain to launch an SEO project?
No, unless that domain has retained a clean and thematically relevant backlink profile. Buying a polluted old domain or one unrelated to your industry brings you nothing — and may even penalize you if Google detects a suspicious history.
If you choose a new domain, own it. Focus on building trust signals quickly: quality backlinks, expert content, impeccable user experience. Age won’t save you from shaky SEO, but good SEO compensates for a lack of age.
How to choose your CMS without shooting yourself in the foot?
Evaluate your CMS on concrete technical criteria: speed of HTML generation, native redirect management, control over tags (canonical, hreflang, meta robots), mobile compatibility, extensibility for advanced needs.
Avoid CMSs that force you to accept ugly URLs, poorly managed server-side JavaScript, or arbitrary limits on the number of indexable pages. Google does not penalize Wix — but if Wix prevents you from correcting an indexing problem, it's you who pays the price.
What to do if your current site suffers from a technical handicap related to the CMS?
Two options: optimize within the limits of your tool, or migrate to a more flexible stack. A CMS migration is heavy (risks of traffic loss, redirects to manage, implementation time) — only start if the gains justify the cost.
In some cases, a good developer can bypass the limitations of a poor CMS through plugins, custom code, or a technical overlay. But if your tool is structurally incompatible with your SEO ambitions, delaying migration only increases technical debt.
- Ensure that your CMS generates clean, customizable URLs without unnecessary parameters
- Make sure essential tags (canonical, meta robots, hreflang) are easily modifiable
- Check the Core Web Vitals: your CMS must allow optimizing resources, lazy loading, caching
- Test mobile indexing: the HTML rendered for Googlebot mobile must be complete and fast
- If migrating CMS, meticulously plan 301 redirects and monitor Search Console for at least 3 months
- Only buy an old domain if its backlink history is clean, relevant, and verifiable
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un domaine de 10 ans a-t-il vraiment zéro avantage sur un domaine neuf ?
Dois-je éviter certains CMS pour des raisons SEO ?
Acheter un vieux domaine expiré peut-il booster mon SEO ?
WordPress a-t-il vraiment un avantage SEO sur Wix ou Shopify ?
Comment un nouveau site peut-il concurrencer des domaines anciens établis ?
🎥 From the same video 25
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h03 · published on 15/10/2020
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