Official statement
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Google states that shared IPs do not negatively impact SEO. This practice, common in shared hosting and CDNs, is not a penalty criterion. In practical terms, you can host your site on a shared server without fearing consequences for your rankings, provided that the hosting remains technically efficient.
What you need to understand
Why does the topic of shared IPs come up regularly in SEO discussions?
The concern surrounding shared IP addresses dates back to the early days of SEO. The persistent idea was that a site sharing its IP with dozens or even hundreds of other sites risked contamination by association. If your neighbor on the server engaged in spamming, you could be penalized as a result.
This belief was based on a simple logic: Google could identify networks of suspicious sites through their common IP fingerprints. In reality, this approach would have massively penalized shared hosting, a standard practice for the past twenty years. Modern CDNs like Cloudflare or Fastly route millions of sites through the same IP ranges without any issues.
What does Google really say about this topic?
Google's position has remained consistent for years: the IP address is not a ranking criterion in itself. The engine evaluates sites individually, not their hosting neighbors. This statement from John Mueller reaffirms this basic principle.
Google's crawlers visit millions of sites each day. They identify domains, not physical servers. A malicious site on a shared IP will be penalized individually, without contaminating its neighbors. Google has hundreds of signals to distinguish a legitimate site from a spam network, far beyond just the IP.
When could shared hosting potentially cause problems?
The real risk with shared IPs is not direct SEO, but the technical quality of the hosting. An overloaded shared server slows down all the sites it hosts. If your Time to First Byte exceeds 600ms because 200 sites are draining CPU resources, then you have a performance issue that impacts SEO.
Some discount hosts deliberately place spam sites on their servers. The risk is not SEO penalties by association, but rather that your IP ends up blacklisted by anti-spam tools used for local SEO or email marketing. A collateral issue, not a Google ranking factor per se.
- Shared IPs are not a penalty criterion in Google's algorithm
- CDNs heavily utilize shared IPs without negative consequences on SEO
- The quality of hosting (speed, availability) remains the true criterion, not the IP itself
- Potential issues are more about email or third-party anti-spam blacklists
- Shared hosting remains a viable solution for the majority of websites
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. No correlation has ever been established between shared IP and drops in rankings for legitimate sites. Empirical tests conducted on hundreds of shared sites show no pattern of penalties related to IP. Sites hosted on Hostinger, OVH shared, or others rank just as well as sites on dedicated servers, as long as they provide the same technical quality.
CDNs are the most obvious proof. Cloudflare routes millions of sites through a few hundred IPs. If Google penalized shared IPs, all these sites would be at a disadvantage. On the contrary, sites behind CDNs often perform better due to the speed and availability optimizations they provide.
What nuances should be considered regarding this claim?
Mueller's statement specifically addresses impact on ranking. This doesn’t cover all aspects of SEO. A shared IP can indeed pose issues if it ends up on blacklists used by certain SEO audit or monitoring tools. You might receive erroneous alerts from your favorite crawler.
The edge case is for sites in sensitive sectors (finance, health, legal) where a dedicated IP offers more control and traceability. Not for Google ranking, but for overall reputation and incident management. If a security issue arises on the IP, you are the only one affected, not 150 neighboring sites that monopolize the host's technical support. [To be verified]: some professionals claim that Google might apply stricter rate limiting on IPs hosting many sites, slowing down the crawl of each domain individually.
In what contexts might this rule not apply?
The main exception concerns Private Blog Networks (PBNs) and other link manipulation schemes. If you build a network of 50 satellite sites all hosted on the same shared IP, Google will detect the pattern not just through the IP itself, but through the overall fingerprint: same analytics, same Search Console, similar internal link structures.
The shared IP then becomes one marker among others in a bundle of clues. It’s not the IP that triggers the penalty, but the obvious link manipulation. An SEO building a PBN will naturally diversify the IPs to cover their tracks, but this remains a symptom of risky practices, not the root cause of the problem.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do when choosing your hosting?
Forget about the IP as a decision criterion. Focus on the actual performance of the hosting: TTFB, measured availability, responsive technical support. Test with GTmetrix or WebPageTest from various geographical locations before migrating your site. A fast shared server is better than a poorly configured VPS.
For an e-commerce site or one with high traffic, invest in hosting that guarantees dedicated resources (RAM, CPU) even in a shared environment. Modern cloud-based options (AWS, Google Cloud, DigitalOcean) allow scaling without going for pure dedicated. The shared IP is no longer the question; it's the isolation of resources that matters.
What mistakes should be avoided in managing your infrastructure?
Don’t pay extra for a dedicated IP just for SEO. It’s a poorly spent budget. If your host sells you this service with the SEO argument, change hosts. A dedicated IP makes sense for an historic SSL certificate (obsolete since Let's Encrypt), for specific emailing needs, or for advanced monitoring, but not for Google.
Avoid discount hosts that pile 500 sites on an undersized server. Look at user reviews regarding stability and response times, not just price. A site that goes down regularly or takes 3 seconds to load will lose its rankings, dedicated IP or not. Savings on hosting often end up costing much more in lost SEO.
How can you verify that your hosting is not impacting your SEO?
Measure your Time to First Byte via Search Console (Core Web Vitals report) or external tools. If you consistently exceed 600ms, your hosting is a hindrance. Also check availability rates: a site inaccessible when Googlebot visits creates accumulating crawl errors.
Ensure your IP is not on major public blacklists (Spamhaus, SORBS) using tools like MXToolbox. If it is, contact your host to understand why. This is not an immediate SEO issue, but it signals a potentially degraded environment that could generate other technical problems.
- Regularly measure your TTFB and Core Web Vitals from different geographical locations
- Check your server's availability rate via external monitoring (UptimeRobot, Pingdom)
- Test the responsiveness of your host’s technical support before a critical incident
- Consult public blacklists for your IP, even if it doesn't impact Google directly
- Compare the performance of your current hosting with alternatives via A/B tests if traffic allows
- Prioritize hosts that guarantee minimum resources (RAM, CPU) even in shared environments
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je migrer vers une IP dédiée pour améliorer mon SEO ?
Mon hébergeur mutualisé peut-il pénaliser mes positions si d'autres sites sur le serveur font du spam ?
Les CDN comme Cloudflare posent-ils un problème puisqu'ils partagent des IP entre millions de sites ?
Comment savoir si mon IP partagée est sur une blacklist qui pourrait causer des problèmes ?
Vaut-il mieux un serveur dédié lent ou un hébergement mutualisé rapide pour le SEO ?
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