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Official statement

Domain names can be distinct or grouped under a single extension with subdomains or subdirectories. Google treats both approaches as equivalent in terms of SEO, but there may be different logistical implications for site management.
10:01
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:12 💬 EN 📅 30/11/2017 ✂ 13 statements
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Other statements from this video 12
  1. 2:45 Le snippet Google doit-il toujours correspondre exactement à la page de destination ?
  2. 3:45 Google détecte-t-il vraiment tout seul la langue de votre site multilingue ?
  3. 12:02 Google peut-il ignorer vos versions linguistiques si elles se ressemblent trop ?
  4. 12:41 Les iframes nuisent-elles vraiment au SEO de votre site ?
  5. 19:33 Pourquoi la Search Console affiche-t-elle des erreurs de données structurées introuvables ailleurs ?
  6. 22:11 Comment le hreflang détermine-t-il vraiment quelle version de votre site Google affiche ?
  7. 22:25 Faut-il vraiment traiter vos pages AMP comme du contenu principal pour qu'elles soient indexées ?
  8. 34:12 Pourquoi Google abandonne-t-il progressivement les pages redirigées vers des erreurs 403 ?
  9. 38:24 Comment Google traite-t-il vraiment les liens internes dupliqués sur une même page ?
  10. 41:02 Pourquoi les URLs avec hashbangs (#!) sont-elles un boulet pour votre référencement ?
  11. 51:10 La vitesse de chargement est-elle vraiment un critère de pénalité Google ?
  12. 61:18 Pourquoi un double canonical AMP/desktop peut-il tuer l'affichage de vos pages ?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that it treats distinct domain names (ccTLDs) and subdomains or subdirectories equally for international SEO. There is no inherent technical advantage of one approach over the other from an SEO perspective. The difference lies solely in the logistical complexity of management: hosting, DNS, SSL certificates, and distinct crawl budgets.

What you need to understand

What does Google exactly say about the architecture of international sites?

The statement from Johannes Müller clarifies a recurring debate: the technical architecture of a multilingual site has no direct impact on SEO performance. Whether you choose national domains (.fr, .de, .co.uk), subdomains (fr.site.com, de.site.com), or subdirectories (site.com/fr/, site.com/de/), Google treats these structures as equivalent.

This position aligns with Google's technical logic which relies on hreflang tags and geographic targeting settings in Search Console to identify linguistic and regional versions. The URL architecture becomes an infrastructure choice, not a ranking lever.

Why does this confusion persist among practitioners?

The common belief that ccTLDs (country code Top-Level Domains) are superior stems from a time when Google used domain extension as a strong signal for geolocation. Before the widespread use of hreflang and Search Console settings, a .fr domain did indeed give an implicit boost for French searches.

Today, this correlation no longer exists mechanically. Google relies on explicit signals: correctly implemented hreflang tags, declared geographical targeting, tailored content, and localized servers when necessary. The domain extension becomes one clue among others, not a decisive factor.

What are the real logistical implications mentioned?

Müller mentions logistical implications without detailing them, but practically: managing 15 national domains requires 15 distinct DNS configurations, 15 SSL certificates, 15 Search Console setups, and 15 independent crawl budgets. Each domain is treated as a separate site by Google's infrastructure.

In contrast, a single site with subdirectories shares one root domain, a unified crawl budget, consolidated domain authority, and simplified redirects. Technical maintenance becomes exponentially simpler as the number of markets increases.

  • No intrinsic SEO difference between ccTLDs, subdomains, and subdirectories according to Google
  • Geographical signals depend on hreflang, Search Console, and localized content, not on the URL
  • ccTLDs increase logistical burden: DNS, SSL, crawl, redirects, future migrations
  • A consolidated site (subdirectories) centralizes domain authority and simplifies technical management
  • The architecture choice should reflect the operational capabilities of the organization, not an outdated SEO belief

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, largely. A/B tests conducted on migrations from ccTLD to subdirectories (or vice versa) show no significant impact on rankings when hreflang tags are correctly implemented. Cases where one architecture seems to perform better than another generally result from configuration errors: poorly coded hreflang, absent Search Console targeting, 302 redirects instead of 301.

The confusion also arises from a correlation bias: sites investing in multiple ccTLDs often have more mature teams, better localized content, and higher marketing budgets. It’s not the .de extension that performs, but the overall investment in the German market. [To be verified]: Google has never published quantitative data on the distribution of architectures in SERPs by region, making rigorous comparative analysis impossible.

In which cases does this equivalence rule not fully apply?

Important nuance: ccTLDs carry an implicit signal of local trust for users, even if Google treats them technically as equivalent. A .fr inspires more trust for a French user than a .com/fr/, regardless of ranking. This UX factor can indirectly impact organic CTR and, consequently, behavior signals.

Another limitation: in certain geographical areas (China, Russia), local search engines (Baidu, Yandex) still favor national domains and local hosting. If your SEO strategy isn't limited to Google, the ccTLD architecture might become relevant again. Müller speaks of the Google world; elsewhere, the rules differ.

What mistakes arise from this false belief?

The most costly: companies buy dozens of ccTLDs in anticipation, only to find they lack the resources to maintain quality localized content on each domain. Result: nearly identical sites with duplicate content, missing hreflang, and abandoned versions. Better to have one well-managed consolidated site than ten neglected ccTLDs.

Another trap: migrating from one architecture to another without a clear strategic reason. Each migration carries a technical risk (misconfigured redirects, temporary ranking loss). If your current architecture works, don’t change just because a competitor chose differently. The grass isn’t greener elsewhere; it’s just different.

Attention: This statement does not cover e-commerce sites with distinct inventories, prices, and currencies by country. In these cases, the architecture should reflect the actual business structure (separate legal entities, local logistics), not a fanciful SEO optimization.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely if you are launching an international site?

Start by mapping your priority markets and your capabilities for producing localized content. If you're targeting 3-5 countries with dedicated teams, ccTLDs may be justified for branding and local trust reasons. If you are targeting 15+ markets with a centralized team, subdirectories become the only viable option in the long term.

Next, audit your technical resources: do you have a performing global CDN? Developers capable of managing complex DNS configurations? A budget for wildcard or multi-domain SSL certificates? These operational constraints often weigh more heavily than pure SEO considerations. Choose the architecture your team can maintain without friction for five years.

What mistakes should be avoided during implementation?

Classic error: mixing architectures without clear logic (example.com/fr/, fr.example.com AND example.fr coexisting). Google can technically manage this situation with hreflang, but you multiply the risks of cannibalization and contradictory signals. Decide on a unique structure and stick to it.

Another trap: forgetting that subdomains are treated as quasi-distinct sites by Google (separate crawl budget, partially isolated authority). If you choose to use subdomains, ensure you create a strong internal linking structure between the language versions and configure hreflang exhaustively. Subdirectories naturally share the root domain authority; subdomains must build it individually.

How can you verify that your current configuration is optimal?

Audit your hreflang tags with Search Console (International Targeting report) or tools like Screaming Frog. Each language version should point to all other alternative versions, including itself (self-referential). An error in a single tag can result in an entire version being deindexed or create loops.

Also, check the crawl rate in Search Console for each domain or subdomain. If Google crawls 100 pages/day on your .fr and 10 pages/day on your .de while both sites are of similar size, you have an architecture or quality signal issue. Subdirectories avoid this imbalance by pooling the crawl budget.

  • Map priority markets and available resources before choosing architecture
  • Implement hreflang tags exhaustively and bidirectionally (all versions point to all)
  • Configure geographical targeting in Search Console for each domain or subdomain
  • Avoid mixing ccTLDs, subdomains, and subdirectories for the same languages/regions
  • Regularly audit the International Targeting report in Search Console to detect hreflang errors
  • Monitor crawl and indexing rates by language version to identify imbalances
International architecture is more about organizational engineering than pure SEO. Google gives you the choice; it's up to you to select the structure your team will maintain without fail. These multilingual optimizations involve complex technical coordination between development, content, and infrastructure. Engaging an SEO agency specialized in international strategies can be wise to avoid costly pitfalls and benefit from tailored support for your target markets.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les ccTLD ont-ils encore un avantage SEO en 2025 ?
Non, Google traite ccTLD, sous-domaines et sous-répertoires de manière équivalente si les hreflang et le ciblage Search Console sont correctement configurés. L'avantage historique des extensions nationales a disparu avec la maturité des signaux géographiques explicites.
Peut-on migrer d'une architecture ccTLD vers des sous-répertoires sans perdre de rankings ?
Oui, à condition de mettre en place des redirections 301 exhaustives et de maintenir les hreflang pendant la transition. Les migrations bien exécutées ne montrent aucune perte de trafic à moyen terme, mais comportent un risque technique court terme.
Les sous-domaines partagent-ils l'autorité du domaine principal ?
Partiellement. Google traite les sous-domaines comme des sites quasi-distincts avec leur propre budget crawl et autorité. Les sous-répertoires héritent directement de l'autorité du domaine root, ce qui simplifie la consolidation de la puissance SEO.
Faut-il héberger les versions locales sur des serveurs géographiquement proches des utilisateurs ?
Ce n'est plus un facteur SEO direct, mais cela impacte la vitesse de chargement, qui elle influence le ranking via les Core Web Vitals. Un CDN global performant suffit généralement à satisfaire ce critère sans hébergement local dédié.
Comment choisir entre sous-domaines et sous-répertoires pour un site multilingue ?
Les sous-répertoires sont recommandés pour la plupart des sites car ils centralisent l'autorité de domaine et simplifient la gestion technique. Les sous-domaines se justifient uniquement si des équipes distinctes gèrent chaque version avec des technologies différentes.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name International SEO

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