Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
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- 40:33 Does font size really influence Google rankings?
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- 70:28 Is it true that content concealed behind a Read More button is actually indexed by Google?
- 70:28 Is it true that content hidden behind a 'Read More' button is actually indexed by Google?
- 98:45 Does internal linking truly overshadow the sitemap in signaling your strategic pages to Google?
- 98:45 Is Internal Linking Really More Crucial Than a Sitemap for Prioritizing Your Pages?
- 111:39 Why Doesn't the Search Console API Show Referring URLs for 404 Errors?
- 144:15 Why does Google keep crawling 404 URLs that are years old?
- 182:01 Should you really be worried about having 30% of URLs as 404s on your site?
- 182:01 Can a high 404 rate really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 217:15 How can you effectively target multiple countries with a single domain without losing your local SEO?
- 227:52 Should you really use hreflang when targeting multiple countries with the same language?
- 227:52 Should you really combine hreflang and geographical targeting in Search Console?
- 276:47 Why do your structured data breadcrumbs not show up in the SERPs?
- 285:28 Why do your rich results vanish from the standard SERPs while still appearing in site searches?
- 293:25 Do Invisible Breadcrumbs Really Block Your Rich Results on Google?
- 325:12 Should you really be optimizing JavaScript hydration for Googlebot in SSR?
- 347:05 Is it true that word count doesn't matter for ranking on Google?
- 347:05 Is the number of words really a ranking factor for Google?
- 400:17 Does the traffic volume of your site affect your Core Web Vitals score?
- 415:20 Does traffic volume really influence your Core Web Vitals?
- 420:26 Does content relevance truly outweigh Core Web Vitals in Google rankings?
- 422:01 Can Core Web Vitals Really Boost Your Ranking Without Relevant Content?
- 510:42 Is it true that Google can't always show the right local version of your site?
- 529:29 Is it really necessary to duplicate all country codes in hreflang for targeting multiple regions?
- 531:48 Why does hreflang in Latin America require each country code individually?
- 574:05 Does PageSpeed Insights really measure your site's performance?
- 598:16 Is it really possible to shift from long-tail to short-tail without changing strategy?
- 616:26 Can you really hide dates from Google search results?
- 635:21 Should you stop updating publication dates to boost your SEO?
- 649:38 Does Google really rewrite your titles to help you out?
- 650:37 Can you really stop Google from rewriting your title tags?
- 688:58 Should you really report SERP bugs with generic queries to expect a response from Google?
- 870:33 Should new e-commerce sites prove their legitimacy outside of Google first?
- 937:08 Is it true that the length of the title really impacts Google rankings?
- 940:42 Is it true that the length of title tags really impacts Google's rankings?
Google allows distinct geographic targeting at the subdirectory level on a gTLD via Search Console. The most specific setting takes precedence: you can have example.com targeted to one country and example.com/fr/ to another. This feature does not apply to ccTLDs like .fr or .de, which already carry an intrinsic geographic signal.
What you need to understand
What is the real difference between gTLDs and ccTLDs for geographic targeting?
A gTLD (generic Top-Level Domain) like .com, .org, or .net sends no geographic signal by default. You decide the targeting using Search Console. In contrast, a ccTLD (country code Top-Level Domain) like .fr, .de, or .co.uk already carries an intrinsic geographic signal: Google automatically associates it with the corresponding country.
Mueller's statement clarifies that you can set a country targeting for the root domain on a gTLD, and then another for a subdirectory. For example: example.com targeted to the United States, example.com/uk/ targeted to the United Kingdom. The most specific parameter wins — here, /uk/ will override the root targeting.
Why is this granularity not available on ccTLDs?
Because the ccTLD already enforces country targeting at the domain level. You cannot tell Google that a .fr targets Germany or that .fr/uk/ targets the United Kingdom: the national extension overrides any manual configuration.
This structural limitation explains why many multilingual strategies prefer gTLDs with subdirectories rather than multiple ccTLDs. The flexibility is incomparably superior, especially when managing secondary markets or regional tests.
How does Search Console apply the “most specific parameter” principle?
Search Console lets you define a geographic targeting at the root domain level, then override it at the level of each subdirectory. If you set example.com for the USA and example.com/fr/ for France, Google will use the /fr/ configuration for everything under that branch.
Note: this granularity stops at the subdirectory level. You cannot target an isolated page or a sub-subdirectory differently from its immediate parent. The hierarchy must remain consistent — otherwise, you send conflicting signals that dilute your local relevance.
- gTLD + subdirectories: flexible and section-configurable country targeting
- ccTLD: fixed and unmodifiable country targeting at the subdirectory level
- Priority: the setting defined on the most specific path always prevails
- Limitation: no targeting at the page or isolated sub-subdirectory level
- Use case: multilingual sites, SaaS platforms, international e-commerce on a single infrastructure
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes, and it’s even a long-documented feature. Field tests show that Google does indeed respect the targeting at the subdirectory level on gTLDs, as long as the on-page signals (hreflang, content language, currencies, local contact information) are consistent.
Where it gets tricky: many SEOs underestimate the importance of secondary signals. Search Console targeting is an indicator, not an absolute override. If your /fr/ displays content in English, prices in dollars, and US addresses, Google will completely ignore you — and rightly so.
What practical limitations does Mueller not mention?
The first limitation: the granularity stops at the first-level subdirectory. You cannot target example.com/blog/uk/ differently from example.com/blog/ if the latter already has a defined targeting. The hierarchy imposes its rules.
Second limitation: geographic targeting absolutely does not guarantee a preferential ranking in the targeted country. It’s an eligibility filter, not a boost. If your /fr/ content is mediocre compared to well-optimized local .fr sites, you won’t gain anything. [To be verified]: Google has never communicated the exact weight of this signal against other local relevance factors (local backlinks, mentions in regional media, user behavior).
In what cases can this setup backfire?
Classic mistake: targeting too finely when your content is not truly localized. If you’ve merely translated US content into French without adapting examples, units, or cultural references, geographic targeting will only expose your shortcomings.
Another trap: mixing ccTLDs and subdirectories in a hybrid architecture. I've seen sites with example.fr for France AND example.com/fr/ for “testing”. Result: total cannibalization, conflicting signals, ranking plummeting. Choose a strategy and stick to it.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to correctly set geographic targeting on a multi-market gTLD?
First step: in Search Console, add each subdirectory as a separate property. You need to create a property for example.com/, one for example.com/fr/, one for example.com/de/, etc. Without this, you cannot set granular targeting.
Next, for each property, go to Settings → International Targeting → Country, and select the target country. Ensure that the root targeting does not contradict your subdirectories — if example.com is targeted “United States” and you want a /uk/, it’s consistent. If the root is “not targeted,” even better to avoid any ambiguity.
What on-page signals should you strengthen for Google to respect your targeting?
Search Console targeting is a signal among others. You must reinforce it with tangible elements: content written in the local language (not just translated), prices displayed in the local currency, local phone numbers and addresses, mentions of relevant cities or regions.
And most importantly: implement hreflang correctly. Each page must point to its language and regional variants with hreflang tags in the header or in the XML sitemap. This is the precision layer that prevents Google from mixing your UK and US versions in the SERPs.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in a multi-market configuration?
Never leave a subdirectory without a defined targeting if you have set one on others. Google might interpret this void as a contradiction and ignore your settings. Be thorough.
Also avoid targeting a country that does not correspond to the language or actual audience of the subdirectory. If /es/ displays content for Spain but you target it at Mexico, you create a cognitive dissonance that harms user experience and relevance signals.
- Create a separate Search Console property for each geolocated subdirectory
- Set a clear country targeting for each property, in line with the content
- Implement hreflang on all affected pages (tag or XML sitemap)
- Truly localize the content: language, currency, cultural references, contact information
- Regularly audit the logs to ensure Googlebot is crawling each localized version correctly
- Monitor positions and traffic by country to detect any targeting anomalies
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on cibler plusieurs pays sur un même sous-répertoire ?
Le ciblage géographique fonctionne-t-il sur les sous-domaines d'un gTLD ?
Faut-il supprimer le ciblage pays de la racine si on utilise des sous-répertoires ?
Un ccTLD avec sous-répertoires peut-il quand même utiliser hreflang ?
Le ciblage Search Console influence-t-il directement le ranking dans le pays visé ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 985h14 · published on 26/02/2021
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