Official statement
Other statements from this video 28 ▾
- 1:05 Do image redirections to HTML pages pass on PageRank?
- 1:05 Why does redirecting your images to third-party pages destroy their SEO value?
- 2:37 Can .eu domains really target multiple countries without SEO penalties?
- 4:15 Should you really automate language redirections for your multilingual website?
- 6:35 Why does Googlebot ignore your cookies and how does it affect your multilingual strategy?
- 7:38 Do you really need to host your domain in the target country to rank locally?
- 9:00 Should you avoid multiple H1 tags when your logo is text-based?
- 9:01 Should you really limit the number of H1 tags on a page for SEO?
- 11:28 Do GSC impressions truly reflect what your users see?
- 12:00 What is a real impression in Search Console, and how does the viewport change everything?
- 14:03 Does lazy loading of images really block Googlebot?
- 14:08 Can lazy loading of images hinder their indexing by Google?
- 17:21 Should you really avoid modifying the content of a recent page?
- 19:30 Can bad backlinks really sink your Google ranking?
- 19:47 Does changing your internal link anchors really trigger a Google recrawl?
- 21:34 Can Google really ignore your unnatural backlinks without penalizing you?
- 24:05 Why do partial site migrations lead to longer SEO fluctuations compared to complete migrations?
- 27:00 Does site structure really enhance its indexing?
- 30:41 Why should you choose a 301 over a 307 when migrating to HTTPS?
- 33:35 Why does the 'site:' command take up to two months to reflect your actual changes?
- 34:54 Can the unavailable_after tag really control how long your content remains in Google's index?
- 35:56 Is Googlebot over-crawling your CSS and JS resources?
- 39:19 Does the 'Unavailable After' tag really allow you to schedule a page's removal from Google's index?
- 50:12 Is it really necessary to reindex the entire site after a URL change?
- 50:34 Should you really avoid changing the structure of your URLs?
- 53:00 Should you retranslate your backlink anchors when changing your site's main language?
- 53:00 Is changing your website's primary language a risk for losing backlinks?
- 54:12 Is the new Search Console really going to change your SEO diagnosis?
Google confirms that .eu domains are treated like generic gTLDs, without automatic geographic targeting. You can structure your international domains freely, but frequently changing geographic settings in Search Console harms your visibility. The freedom of structure does not exempt you from strategic consistency, as Google dislikes instability in targeting signals.
What you need to understand
Why does Google consider certain TLDs as generic?
Google categorizes domain extensions into two main types: ccTLDs (country code Top-Level Domains) like .fr, .de, .uk that convey a strong geographic signal, and gTLDs (generic Top-Level Domains) like .com, .org, .eu that do not imply automatic targeting.
The .eu extension raises questions regularly. Despite its apparent European link, Google treats it as a generic domain. As a result, a .eu site can target France, Germany, or the United States without technical restrictions, but you must manually set the targeting in Search Console.
This geographic neutrality offers strategic flexibility, but it also comes with responsibility: explicitly define your target markets through the console, hreflang tags, and content structure.
What freedom do you have in structuring international domains?
Mueller asserts that you can organize your international domains as you see fit. In practice, nothing prevents you from mixing ccTLDs, subdomains, subdirectories, or dedicated domains based on your budgetary, technical, or strategic constraints.
This stated flexibility conceals a more complex reality. Each architectural choice has direct implications on crawl budget, authority dilution, hreflang management, and technical maintenance. A site in subdirectories (site.com/fr/, site.com/de/) centralizes authority but complicates precise linguistic targeting.
ccTLDs (site.fr, site.de) send a strong geographic signal but fragment domain authority and increase hosting costs. Subdomains (fr.site.com, de.site.com) hold an intermediary position, partially inheriting authority from the root domain while allowing geo-located hosting.
Why should you avoid frequent changes in geographic targeting?
Google penalizes instability in signals. When you change geographic targeting in Search Console, you ask the engine to completely reevaluate your site's relevance for a given area. This process takes time, taps into crawl budget, and can cause drastic fluctuations in visibility.
Changing targeting every three months, testing different configurations, or alternating between global and local targeting sends an amateurish message. Google interprets this volatility as a lack of clear strategy, which undermines the trust placed in your domain.
Occasional and justified adjustments remain acceptable. Transitioning from a France target to a global French-speaking target because your business is evolving is legitimate. But repeatedly oscillating out of opportunism or a lack of vision undermines your positions in the long term.
- .eu domains do not carry any automatic geographic signal and require manual configuration
- You can freely structure your international sites (ccTLDs, subdomains, subdirectories), but each choice has distinct SEO consequences
- Frequently changing geographic targeting in Search Console harms the stability of your visibility
- Long-term strategic consistency outweighs tactical opportunism
- Targeting signals (hreflang, GSC, hosting, content) must be aligned and maintained
SEO Expert opinion
Does this stated freedom hide real technical constraints?
Claiming that you can structure as you wish is technically correct but strategically misleading. Each architecture has cascading consequences: crawl speed, PageRank transmission, maintenance complexity, infrastructure costs.
A .eu domain targeting France via Search Console remains less powerful than a native .fr for local intent queries. Google does weigh your manual settings, but the ccTLD signal remains a top criterion for geographic relevance. Mueller does not explicitly state this, leading to a gray area. [To verify]: to what extent can a well-configured .eu compensate for the ccTLD signal in ultra-competitive sectors in a specific area?
The real question is not 'Can I do what I want?' but 'Which choice positions me best considering my resources, competition, and target markets?'. Technical flexibility does not free you from rigorous strategic analysis.
Are frequent targeting changes really so penalizing?
Field experience shows that Google does not tolerate instability well. A site that switches from a France target to a global target and then back again within a short time sees its positions drop drastically and then takes several months to stabilize.
The engine must recalculate the relevance of your pages for each area, re-crawl with different priorities, and reassess your local competitors. This process consumes resources and generates an algorithmic uncertainty period during which your visibility becomes erratic.
Let's be honest: Google does not publish any numerical data on the duration or extent of these fluctuations. Mueller remains deliberately vague. [To verify]: How long does it usually take to regain stable positions after a targeting change? It's hard to answer without official data, but observations suggest a timeframe of 3 to 6 months depending on the site size.
When does this recommendation not apply?
Some geographic migrations are unavoidable. A business starting in France and then truly internationalizing must adjust its targeting. An acquisition, a merger, or a strategic pivot justifies a configuration change.
In these cases, Google accepts the transition if it is unique, justified, and documented. Prepare the ground: align content, hreflang, structure before touching Search Console settings. Inform via an internal changelog, closely monitor fluctuations.
The problem arises when changes are opportunistic and repeated: testing a market for two months, going back, trying another country three months later. This behavior erodes algorithmic trust in a way that is difficult to reverse.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to choose the right architecture for international deployment?
Start by mapping your technical and budgetary resources. ccTLDs offer the strongest geographic signal but require local hosting, teams per market, and fragmented management. If you are targeting 5 countries with a tight budget, this option quickly becomes impractical.
Subdirectories (site.com/fr/, site.com/de/) centralize authority and simplify maintenance, but dilute the geographic signal. You will need to compensate with impeccable hreflang, culturally adapted content (not just translated), and ideally a performant CDN hosting for each area.
Subdomains (fr.site.com, de.site.com) allow geo-located hosting and semi-autonomous management while retaining some root authority. It's a pragmatic compromise for medium-sized companies targeting 3 to 10 markets.
What should you do concretely with an existing .eu domain?
If you already operate a .eu, start by defining your main market in Search Console and do not touch this setting for at least 12 months. Concurrently, strengthen all secondary signals: properly implemented hreflang tags, culturally appropriate content (not just translated), local backlinks, mentions of physical address if relevant.
Consider a comparative audit with a competing ccTLD in your target market. If the visibility gap is structural and persistent despite equivalent quality metrics, migrating to a ccTLD may be justified. But this decision must be made once, with a methodical migration plan, not on a whim.
Document each targeting adjustment in a central file. If you need to change the settings for legitimate strategic reasons, prepare the transition over 2-3 months: first align content, then hreflang, then GSC targeting. Never change everything at once.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never multiply geographic targeting tests. Google interprets this volatility as a lack of seriousness. A single poorly prepared change can drop your traffic by 30 to 50% for several months.
Do not use a .eu thinking you will benefit from an automatic European advantage. Without Search Console configuration and hreflang, your site will be treated as a generic .com, without any geographic boost.
Do not neglect secondary signals. GSC targeting alone is not enough. You must align hosting, local backlinks, currency, geographic mentions, and phone numbers. The overall consistency of signals makes the difference.
These international optimizations require sharp expertise and coordination between technique, content, and link-building. Many businesses underestimate the complexity and end up with shaky configurations that permanently penalize their visibility. Consulting a specialized SEO agency for international matters can avert costly mistakes and significantly speed up results in each target market.
- Define a consistent international architecture based on your resources (ccTLD, subdomains, or subdirectories) and do not change it again
- Configure geographic targeting in Search Console just once after careful consideration
- Implement impeccable hreflang tags for each linguistic and geographic version
- Align all signals: hosting, local backlinks, culturally appropriate content, address mentions
- Document each targeting modification with dates, reasons, and observed impact
- Regularly audit the consistency between declared targeting and actual signals perceived by Google
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un domaine .eu peut-il ranker aussi bien qu'un .fr pour des requêtes françaises ?
Combien de temps après un changement de ciblage géographique faut-il pour retrouver des positions stables ?
Faut-il utiliser des sous-domaines ou des sous-répertoires pour un site multilingue ?
Peut-on cibler plusieurs pays avec un seul domaine .eu ?
Le ciblage géographique dans Search Console suffit-il pour ranker localement ?
🎥 From the same video 28
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 07/09/2017
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.