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Official statement

It is possible to target specific regions with subdirectories on a generic domain. It works well for differentiating local markets.
21:14
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 54:42 💬 EN 📅 10/12/2019 ✂ 19 statements
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Other statements from this video 18
  1. 4:20 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer du 404 ou 410 pour bloquer le crawl des URLs d'un site hacké ?
  2. 4:20 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer un 404 ou 410 sur les URLs hackées pour accélérer leur désindexation ?
  3. 7:24 L'outil de suppression d'URL désindexe-t-il vraiment vos pages ?
  4. 9:14 Faut-il vraiment limiter le crawl de Googlebot sur votre serveur ?
  5. 11:40 Faut-il vraiment séparer contenus adultes et grand public pour éviter les pénalités SafeSearch ?
  6. 11:45 Faut-il vraiment séparer le contenu adulte du reste pour éviter les pénalités SafeSearch ?
  7. 12:42 Peut-on élargir la thématique d'un site sans impacter son référencement actuel ?
  8. 12:50 Diversifier les catégories de contenu peut-il tuer votre ranking Google ?
  9. 16:19 Les balises hreflang suffisent-elles vraiment à éviter la canonicalisation entre contenus régionaux identiques ?
  10. 19:20 Pourquoi Google affiche-t-il une URL différente de celle qu'il canonise en international ?
  11. 22:14 Le géociblage par sous-répertoire fonctionne-t-il vraiment sur un domaine générique ?
  12. 22:27 Pourquoi louer vos sous-domaines peut-il détruire votre référencement naturel ?
  13. 24:15 Louer des sous-domaines nuit-il vraiment au classement de votre site principal ?
  14. 29:24 410 vs 404 : faut-il vraiment gérer deux codes HTTP différents pour la désindexation ?
  15. 29:40 Faut-il utiliser un code 410 plutôt qu'un 404 pour accélérer la désindexation ?
  16. 45:45 Les faux positifs de Google Search Console signalent-ils vraiment un hack sur votre site ?
  17. 51:00 Les paramètres de tracking dans vos URLs sabotent-ils votre budget de crawl ?
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📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that subdirectories (/fr/, /de/) on a generic domain (.com) allow for geographic targeting of specific audiences. This approach remains effective for differentiating local markets without multiplying domain names. Specifically, this means a site can consolidate its authority on a single domain while clearly signaling its regional targeting intentions through the Search Console.

What you need to understand

Why does Google endorse this structural approach?

John Mueller's statement addresses a recurring question: is it absolutely necessary to have a ccTLD (.fr, .de) or a geolocated gTLD to rank locally? The answer is no. A generic domain like .com can perfectly host geographically targeted subdirectories.

The trick lies in the Search Console configuration. Google allows you to manually associate a subdirectory with a target country through the international targeting tool. This explicit statement counters a common misconception: the ccTLD is not a requirement; it is a strong signal but not exclusive.

What technical prerequisites must be met for this to work?

The first condition: the hreflang tags must be impeccable. If your structure relies on /fr/, /es/, /it/, each page must declare its linguistic and geographical variants. Without coherent hreflang, Google may serve the wrong version to the wrong audience.

The second point: the content must be genuinely differentiated. Duplicating the same text with automatic translation without local adaptation is not enough. On-page signals (currency, local phone number, adapted legal mentions) reinforce targeting.

Does this method have structural limitations?

Let’s be honest: consolidating multiple markets on a single domain sometimes dilutes local perception. A .fr site inspires more trust in France than a .com/fr/, especially in sensitive sectors (healthcare, finance, legal). The user trust signal plays an indirect but real role.

Another limitation: the management of backlinks. A link pointing to your root .com benefits the entire site, but a link to .fr specifically targets that market. With subdirectories, the granularity of the link profile is less obvious to manage.

  • Subdirectories work if you correctly configure the Search Console and hreflang
  • Authentic local content is still essential—not just automatic translation
  • User trust may be lower than with a ccTLD in certain sectors
  • SEO management of backlinks requires a more nuanced approach to isolate performance by market
  • This architecture suits international brands better than 100% local players

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, but with significant nuances. Large international corporations (Amazon, Booking, Airbnb) have been massively using this strategy for years—and it works. Their domain authority is such that the subdirectory signal is more than sufficient.

The problem? A less established site with low DA does not benefit from the same halo effect. A recent .com with /fr/ will struggle to gain traction in France compared to a native .fr, all else being equal. The ccTLD remains a more immediate geographic relevance signal for Google—and especially for the user scanning the SERPs.

What nuances should be added to this assertion?

Mueller talks about “differentiating local markets,” not dominating a local market. The difference is crucial. If your ambition is to become a leader in Germany with a strong foothold, a .de is preferable. If you’re deploying a multilingual presence with distributed budgets, subdirectories make sense.

Another rarely discussed point: the management of migrations. Transitioning from a .fr to a .com/fr/ (or the reverse) is a heavy operation that risks temporary traffic loss. The initial choice of architecture is therefore strategic—not just a technical issue. [To be verified]: Google has never published quantitative data on the comparative impact of ccTLD vs. subdirectory with equal authority.

In what situations does this approach reach its limits?

If you’re targeting highly regulated markets where local hosting and local legal entities matter (healthcare, finance, betting), the subdirectory becomes a handicap. Users and sometimes even regulations expect a ccTLD. The trust signal weighs heavily.

Another edge case: sites with strong territorial anchoring (local commerce, artisans, liberal professions). A Parisian plumber has no interest in using a .com/fr-paris/. The ccTLD + precise localization in the content is much more effective. This statement from Mueller is primarily aimed at multi-country actors, not local SMEs.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should be done practically if one chooses this architecture?

The first step: configure each subdirectory in the Search Console with its dedicated geographic targeting. This is non-negotiable. Without this manual declaration, Google has no explicit signal to understand your intent.

Next, deploy hreflang across all pages. Each URL must point to its linguistic and geographical equivalents. Be careful of common errors: hreflang conflicting with canonicals, redirect loops, or unclaimed orphan pages.

What mistakes should be avoided in this configuration?

Don’t fall for the trap of pseudo-localized duplicate content. Translating word for word without adapting examples, currencies, or cultural references deceives no one—neither Google nor your visitors. The bounce rate skyrockets, the CTR drops, and your user signals drag down your ranking.

Another frequent mistake: mixing signals. If you use subdirectories, don’t also deploy geolocated subdomains (fr.mysite.com AND mysite.com/fr/). Choose a logic and stick to it. Architectural consistency is a quality signal for Google.

How can I verify that my targeting is working correctly?

Analyze your performance by country in the Search Console. If your subdirectory /de/ generates 80% of its traffic from Germany, that’s a good sign. If the traffic is scattered across 15 countries without logic, your targeting isn’t working.

Also, test the consistency of the SERPs: search your keywords from different countries (via VPN or dedicated tools). Which version of your site shows up? If Google serves /fr/ to a German user, there’s a signaling problem.

  • Configure each subdirectory in the Search Console with its target country
  • Deploy coherent hreflang tags on all pages
  • Genuinely adapt the content—not just mechanically translate
  • Check performance by country in the Search Console each month
  • Test the consistency of the SERPs from several geolocations
  • Avoid architectural mixes (no simultaneous subdomain AND subdirectory)
The subdirectory approach works, but it requires technical rigor and editorial consistency. If you aim for multiple markets with a global brand and a consolidated budget, it’s a relevant option. For a 100% local player or a highly regulated market, the ccTLD remains safer. These optimizations—between precise technical configuration, management of hreflang, and multi-country editorial strategy—can quickly become complex. If you lack internal resources or want to secure your international deployment, working with a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and accelerate your time-to-market.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Peut-on cibler plusieurs pays avec des sous-dossiers sur un domaine .com ?
Oui, c'est exactement ce que Google valide. Chaque sous-dossier (/fr/, /de/, /es/) peut être configuré pour cibler un pays spécifique via la Search Console, à condition de déployer des hreflang cohérents.
Les sous-dossiers sont-ils aussi efficaces qu'un ccTLD pour le SEO local ?
Ils fonctionnent, mais le ccTLD reste un signal géographique plus immédiat pour Google et pour l'utilisateur. Sur des marchés concurrentiels ou réglementés, le ccTLD conserve un avantage en termes de confiance et de pertinence locale.
Faut-il absolument utiliser hreflang avec cette architecture ?
Oui. Sans hreflang, Google ne peut pas déterminer quelle version servir à quel utilisateur. C'est le signal technique indispensable pour que le ciblage par sous-dossier fonctionne correctement.
Comment Google sait-il qu'un sous-dossier cible un pays précis ?
Via la configuration manuelle dans la Search Console (ciblage international) et les balises hreflang qui déclarent la langue et la région de chaque variante. Le contenu localisé et les signaux on-page renforcent ce signal.
Peut-on mélanger sous-dossiers et sous-domaines pour différents marchés ?
C'est déconseillé. Mélanger les architectures crée de la confusion pour Google et dilue vos signaux. Choisissez une logique (sous-dossiers OU sous-domaines) et appliquez-la de manière cohérente à l'ensemble de vos marchés.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name International SEO

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