Official statement
Other statements from this video 52 ▾
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- 1:04 Should you use alt text for infographics instead of converting them to HTML?
- 2:17 Is it really necessary to duplicate the text of infographics for Google to index them?
- 2:37 Do you really need to duplicate your infographics' content in text for Google?
- 3:41 Why can a site that steals your content rank better than you?
- 4:13 Why isn't optimizing a single SEO factor ever enough to outpace a competitor?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait before reacting to ranking fluctuations?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait for ranking fluctuations to stabilize before taking action?
- 8:58 Do outgoing links to authoritative sites really boost your Google ranking?
- 8:58 Can deep linking to a mobile app really boost your website's SEO?
- 10:32 Site Restructuring: Why does Google recommend redirects over reverse proxy?
- 10:32 Is it true that Google advises against using reverse proxies for migrating from a subdomain to a subfolder?
- 12:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to mask Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to hide Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:50 Is it true that the highest number in Search Console is usually the right one?
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- 14:44 Should you really set noindex for low-content user profile pages?
- 16:57 Do multiple redirect chains really hinder Google's crawling?
- 17:02 Are Multiple Redirect Chains Really Hurting Your SEO?
- 19:58 Could separating each step of a site migration save you weeks of SEO diagnostics?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really penalize your organic SEO?
- 24:41 Should you overlook historical Mobile Usability errors in Search Console?
- 24:41 Should you ignore mobile errors in Search Console if the live test comes back clean?
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- 25:50 Should you really nofollow your menu links to optimize crawling?
- 26:46 Do Google Ads scripts really slow down your site in the eyes of PageSpeed Insights?
- 27:06 Does Google Ads really penalize the speed of your pages in PageSpeed Insights?
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- 29:28 Should you really aim for 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
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- 39:52 Should you still use disavow or has Google truly automated the ignoring of spam links?
- 40:02 Should you still disavow spammy links pointing to your site?
- 41:04 Does the FAQ schema work if the answers are hidden in an accordion?
- 41:04 Is it possible to mark a main page with FAQ schema, or is a dedicated page necessary?
- 41:59 Is it really necessary to have a dedicated page for each video to rank on Google?
- 41:59 Should you create a separate page for each video instead of grouping them together?
- 43:42 How does Google choose which sitelinks to display under your search results?
- 44:13 Does Google really control sitelinks through site structure?
- 45:19 Has PageRank really become a negligible ranking factor for Google?
- 45:19 Is PageRank still a top-ranking factor that you should keep an eye on?
- 46:46 Should you always use the Video Object schema for YouTube embeds subject to GDPR?
- 46:53 Do YouTube two-click embeds really hurt video SEO?
- 50:12 Are mobile interstitials truly all penalized by Google?
- 50:43 Is it really possible to show different interstitials based on traffic source without SEO risk?
- 52:08 Is it true that Google ignores GDPR interstitials without penalizing your SEO?
- 53:08 Can we truly measure the SEO impact of intrusive interstitials?
- 53:18 Do intrusive interstitials really have a measurable impact on your SEO?
Google states that no webspam penalty is applied during domain migrations or mergers. Simple one-to-one redirects stabilize within a few days or weeks, while complex mergers may take several months. Separating technical steps (redirects, structural changes, design overhaul) helps isolate ranking issues and identify the real cause of fluctuations.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize the absence of penalties during migrations?
Google wants to reassure SEO professionals who often hesitate to migrate for fear of an algorithmic penalty. The reality is that merging or redirecting domains does not trigger any automatic webspam filter. The fluctuations observed are not penalties — they are natural adjustments of the engine as it recalculates authority, semantic context, and relevance signals.
The distinction is crucial: a penalty punishes abusive practices (spam, link manipulation, cloaking). A fluctuation reflects the time it takes for the engine to understand that domain-A becomes domain-B, that content has changed URLs, or that two catalogs are merging. During this recalculation phase, ranking may shift — but this is not a punishment, it's algorithmic mechanics.
What’s the difference between a simple migration and a complex merger?
A one-to-one migration (every URL-A redirects to an equivalent URL-B) stabilizes quickly because Google can simply transfer signals: PageRank, thematic authority, link anchors. Within a few days or weeks, old URLs disappear from the index and the new ones inherit the SEO capital. It's mechanical, predictable.
A content merger is a different story. You are combining two domains with different structures, partially overlapping themes, and distinct audiences. Google must reevaluate the overall relevance of the new domain, understand how the contents relate, and recalculate topics and entities. This takes several months — and during this time, rankings can vary significantly depending on queries.
Why separate the technical steps of a migration?
If you change the redirects, URL structure, and design all at once, and your traffic drops by 30%, good luck identifying the cause. Do chained redirects slow down the crawl? Does the new hierarchy dilute the internal linking? Does the new template hide important contents?
By separating the tasks, you can measure the impact of each change: first the redirects (you validate that the ranking transfer is going well), then the restructuring (you check that the new URLs are capturing the expected traffic), and finally the design (you ensure that Core Web Vitals and click-through rates do not collapse). It’s methodical diagnosis, not superstition.
- No webspam penalty is applied during a domain migration or merger — fluctuations are normal.
- One-to-one migrations stabilize within a few days or weeks, while complex mergers take several months.
- Separating the steps (redirects, structure, design) allows to isolate problems and quickly identify the cause of traffic losses.
- Google must recalculate authority, topics, and relevance signals — this process takes time and causes ranking variations.
- A successful migration relies on a rigorous methodology, not on the hope that Google understands everything instantly.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. In principle, Google does not penalize migrations — we do not see a webspam filter triggering just because a site changes domain. However, the phrase "a few days or weeks" for a one-to-one migration is optimistic. In practice, even a clean migration with well-configured 301 redirects can take 4 to 8 weeks to fully stabilize, especially if the site has a low crawl budget or if Google does not visit all URLs immediately.
Content mergers are worse. Mueller says "much longer" without quantifying — and this is where it gets frustrating. On large e-commerce sites or media with tens of thousands of pages, we observe fluctuations for 6 months or more. The problem is that Google does not provide any metrics: how many pages need to be recrawled? How long before the signals from the old domain are fully transferred? [To be confirmed] — this gray area makes it difficult to reassure a client who sees their traffic oscillate violently.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
To say "no penalty" does not mean "no risk". A poorly executed migration can lead to permanent ranking losses — not due to a sanction, but because you broke essential signals. For example: you do not redirect all URLs (some go 404), you create chained redirects (A → B → C), or you radically change the structure (deep URLs become root categories). Google does not punish you, but it can no longer find the content or understand its context.
Another point: domain mergers amplify content duplication issues. If two sites had similar pages on the same topics, merging without consolidating the contents can dilute authority instead of concentrating it. Google must choose which version to index — and if you do not guide this choice with clear canonicals and a consolidation strategy, you lose ranking on key queries.
What circumstances does this rule not apply to?
Mueller's statement assumes a technically clean migration. If your old domain already had issues (manual penalty, spam, low-quality content), these problems do not magically disappear with the migration. Worse: if you massively redirect spammy or thin content pages to a clean domain, you risk polluting the new domain with these negative signals.
Let's be honest: Google never details how long it keeps a domain's history. If you buy an expired domain with a poor backlink profile and redirect it to your main site, you will not trigger an immediate webspam penalty — but the low-quality signals will affect your overall ranking. [To be confirmed] — this area remains opaque, and Google refuses to provide specific thresholds.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely before a migration or merger?
First, audit the existing: map all URLs that generate organic traffic (not just the homepage and categories), identify pages with strong backlinks, and spot duplicated or obsolete content. Then, define a precise redirect matrix — each old URL must point to the most relevant new URL, not a generic page or the homepage.
For a merger, consolidate content before redirecting. If domain-A and domain-B both have an article on "SEO migration", decide which becomes the canonical version, enrich it with unique elements from the other, and then redirect the merged version. Don’t let Google choose for you — it will index the version it crawls first, and that is not necessarily the best.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided during a migration?
First mistake: doing everything at once. You change the domain, URL structure, CMS, and design on the same day. Result: impossible to diagnose what causes traffic losses. Second mistake: not testing redirects in pre-production. You discover after going live that 20% of URLs go 404 or that chained redirects slow down the crawl.
Third classic mistake: not monitoring crawl budget after migration. Google will massively recrawl the old URLs to check the redirects — if your server is slow or you block certain bots, the ranking transfer takes months. Check the Search Console: old URLs should gradually disappear from the index, and new ones should be indexed quickly.
How to verify that the migration is proceeding correctly?
Track three critical metrics: the successful 301 redirect rate (via Search Console or a crawler like Screaming Frog), the volume of indexed pages on the new domain (site:newdomain.com in Google), and the organic traffic by landing page (compare before/after in GA4). If some strategic pages lose 50% of traffic while the redirects are correct, it is probably a semantic context issue (the new template or structure no longer values these contents).
In the first weeks, do not change anything else. Let Google digest the migration before optimizing internal linking or redesigning templates. And if you observe violent fluctuations, wait at least 4 to 6 weeks before panicking — this is the normal timeframe for an average site to stabilize.
- Create a complete redirect matrix (each old URL → relevant new URL, no redirects to the homepage)
- Test redirects in pre-production with a crawler to catch 404s, chains, and loops
- Separate the steps: first redirects, then restructuring, and finally design
- Monitor the crawl budget and the indexing speed of new URLs (Search Console, "Coverage" section)
- Consolidate duplicate content before the merger (not after)
- Compare organic traffic by landing page before/after to identify localized losses
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une migration de domaine peut-elle déclencher une pénalité Google ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une migration un-à-un se stabilise ?
Pourquoi une fusion de domaines prend-elle plus de temps qu'une migration simple ?
Faut-il rediriger toutes les URLs, même celles qui génèrent peu de trafic ?
Peut-on changer la structure d'URL et le design en même temps que la migration ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 24/07/2020
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