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Official statement

Creating a blog on a subdomain or as a directory of an existing site does not automatically bring an SEO advantage for the rest of the site. The structure to choose depends on what is simplest for the user and does not have a particular preference for Google.
4:17
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:14 💬 EN 📅 16/07/2014 ✂ 8 statements
Watch on YouTube (4:17) →
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Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that placing a blog on a subdomain (blog.site.com) or in a directory (site.com/blog) does not provide any automatic SEO advantage for the rest of the site. The decision should be based on user convenience, not on a fantasy of magical boosts. In short: stop looking for technical hacks where there are none.

What you need to understand

Why does this question keep coming up?

The structure of a blog has divided SEOs for years. Should editorial content be isolated on a subdomain or integrated as a simple folder? This obsession stems from a persistent belief: that a blog could ‘positively contaminate’ the rest of the site through technical proximity.

The reality is more brutal. Google treats content based on its thematic relevance and quality, not its location in the hierarchy. An exceptional article on a subdomain will have the same SEO impact as one in a directory, as long as quality and topicality signals are present.

How does Google actually evaluate a subdomain versus a directory?

Subdomains are technically considered semi-independent entities. Google can index them separately, assign them a distinct crawl budget, and even evaluate them with different E-E-A-T criteria if the content diverges significantly.

Directories benefit from a clear structural continuity with the main domain. Internal linking is more natural, and authority signals flow more smoothly. But this does not mean an automatic boost: if your blog produces poor content, it can even dilute the overall authority of the site.

What truly determines the SEO impact of a blog?

The real lever is not the technical structure, but the thematic consistency and editorial depth. An e-commerce blog discussing cooking on a site selling gardening tools won’t bring anything, regardless of its technical position.

The SEO impact comes from the ability to create a dense semantic network between product pages and informational content. This requires thoughtful information architecture, strategic linking, and editorial production aligned with your commercial target search intents.

  • No structure automatically generates SEO value: subdomain or directory, content remains king.
  • Google assesses thematic relevance, not technical proximity in the URL.
  • A blog dilutes authority if it lacks consistency with the main site, no matter its position.
  • Internal linking and information architecture matter more than the initial structural choice.
  • User simplicity should take precedence over any hypothetical technical considerations.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this Google position really reflect on-the-ground practices?

Let’s look at the facts: the majority of authoritative sites use directories for their blogs, not subdomains. Is that by chance? No. It’s because directory integration simplifies backlink management, authority transfer through internal linking, and avoids fragmentation of the link profile.

But Mueller's statement remains technically accurate. There is no automatic boost. What boosts is the quality of the implementation: strategic linking, content relevance, and leveraging semantic clusters. A poorly managed directory will be as useless as a neglected subdomain. [To be verified]: Does Google intentionally downplay the importance of structure to discourage purely technical optimizations at the expense of content?

In what cases does a subdomain make strategic sense?

If your blog covers a topic radically different from the main site, a subdomain can prevent topical confusion. A concrete example: a B2B software publisher launching a mainstream news media site. Separating allows building two distinct E-E-A-T profiles without contamination.

Another case: technical or organizational constraints. A blog managed by an external team, on a different tech stack, with a distinct CMS. Here, the subdomain simplifies architecture without sacrificing performance. But in 80% of typical e-commerce or corporate cases, it’s a false problem that masks a lack of clear editorial strategy.

What misinterpretations could this statement provoke?

The first drift: believing that structure does not matter at all. It matters for UX, crawling, and linking. What does not matter is the naïve hope that it will magically solve your ranking problems without editorial effort.

The second trap: ignoring crawl budget implications. A poorly configured subdomain may receive insufficient crawl budget if Google sees it as a secondary site. A directory naturally inherits the main domain's budget, facilitating quick indexing of new articles. This is not an SEO boost, but a non-negligible operational facilitation for sites that publish frequently.

Attention: If you are migrating an existing blog from a subdomain to a directory (or vice versa), 301 redirects must be impeccable. Any loss of link juice during the migration will negate any hypothetical benefits of the new structure.

Practical impact and recommendations

How do you concretely choose between a subdomain and a directory?

Ask yourself three factual questions: (1) Does the blog share the same theme as the main site? (2) Is the management team the same? (3) Are you using the same tech stack? If all three answers are “yes,” choose a directory. It’s simpler to manage, link, and monitor in Search Console.

If at least two answers are “no,” the subdomain may be justified. But do not expect an SEO miracle. You will need to compensate with increased external linking efforts, targeted backlinks to the subdomain, and a robust autonomous editorial strategy.

What optimizations should be prioritized regardless of the chosen structure?

Internal linking becomes critical. If you opt for a directory, create strong semantic bridges between blog articles and commercial pages. If it’s a subdomain, ensure that the main site strategically points to the blog’s pillar content to maintain topical cohesion.

Next, information architecture. Organize your content into clear thematic silos, with hub pages distributing authority to the deeper content. This works well in both directory and subdomain, but requires strict editorial discipline. Finally, monitor your crawl metrics in Search Console: a subdomain that is under-crawled indicates that Google does not give it the expected importance.

What should you do if you've already made the wrong structural choice?

Let’s be honest: migrating just for the sake of it is rarely justified. If your blog is performing poorly, the problem is likely the quality of the content, not the slash or dot in the URL. Before adjusting the structure, audit the thematic relevance, article depth, and linking strategy.

If you still decide to migrate, plan for three months of post-migration tracking to correct indexing errors, unexpected traffic declines, and rank losses. A well-executed migration should not result in any lasting losses, but a sloppy migration can destroy years of editorial work. These complex technical operations, involving 301 redirects, crawl budget management, and link profile preservation, often require sharp expertise. If your team lacks resources or experience in these areas, hiring a specialized SEO agency can secure the transition and avoid costly mistakes that could impact your visibility for a long time.

  • Assess the thematic consistency between the blog and the main site before making any structural decisions.
  • Prefer the directory by default unless there are major technical or editorial constraints.
  • Build a strategic internal linking structure that connects informational and commercial content.
  • Monitor the crawl budget allocated to your blog in Search Console, especially in subdomains.
  • Never migrate an existing structure without a comprehensive and tested 301 redirect plan.
  • Measure SEO impact by content quality and linking, never by structure alone.
The choice between a subdomain and a directory for your blog is not a magical SEO lever. Google evaluates relevance and quality, not URL syntax. Choose the structure that simplifies your operational management and user experience, then focus your efforts on what truly matters: producing thematically aligned content, linking intelligently, and building lasting editorial authority. The rest is technical folklore.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un blog en sous-domaine est-il pénalisé par Google ?
Non, Google ne pénalise pas les sous-domaines. Ils sont simplement traités avec une certaine indépendance par rapport au domaine principal, ce qui peut compliquer le transfert d'autorité via le maillage interne mais n'entraîne aucune sanction algorithmique.
Migrer mon blog de sous-domaine vers répertoire améliorera-t-il mon SEO ?
Pas automatiquement. Si votre contenu est faible ou mal maillé, changer la structure ne résoudra rien. La migration peut faciliter le maillage interne et la gestion du crawl budget, mais uniquement si vous exploitez ces avantages avec une stratégie éditoriale solide.
Le crawl budget est-il vraiment différent entre sous-domaine et répertoire ?
Oui. Google peut allouer un crawl budget distinct à un sous-domaine, potentiellement inférieur si le contenu est jugé moins prioritaire. Un répertoire hérite du budget global du domaine principal, ce qui facilite l'indexation rapide des nouveaux contenus.
Puis-je utiliser les deux structures simultanément sur un même site ?
Techniquement oui, mais c'est rarement justifié. Cela fragmente votre architecture, complique le maillage et dilue les signaux topiques. Réservez cette approche aux cas où deux lignes éditoriales radicalement différentes coexistent (ex : média grand public + ressources B2B techniques).
Comment Google détermine-t-il la cohérence thématique entre blog et site ?
Via l'analyse sémantique des contenus, le vocabulaire partagé, les entités nommées récurrentes, et la structure du maillage interne. Un blog e-commerce vendant chaussures qui parle de recettes de cuisine sera perçu comme incohérent, quelle que soit sa position structurelle.
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