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Official statement

Reconsideration requests in case of penalties are handled on a site-by-site basis, rather than by user account. There is no need to create a new account for each site.
17:55
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 30:38 💬 EN 📅 20/01/2014 ✂ 5 statements
Watch on YouTube (17:55) →
Other statements from this video 4
  1. 4:50 Comment exploiter efficacement les données Search Console pour optimiser le mobile ?
  2. 8:36 Faut-il vraiment privilégier le 302 au 301 pour les redirections mobiles ?
  3. 20:00 Pourquoi Google déploie-t-il certaines fonctionnalités sur un domaine mais pas sur l'autre ?
  4. 23:58 Pourquoi soumettre une demande de réexamen sans corriger les problèmes est-il voué à l'échec ?
📅
Official statement from (12 years ago)
TL;DR

Google processes reconsideration requests for penalties on a site-by-site basis, not per user account. Creating a new Search Console account does not change the penalty removal process. What matters is fixing the technical and content issues identified on the penalized site before submitting the request.

What you need to understand

Why is this clarification necessary?

Some practitioners believe that a "burned" Search Console account due to repeated penalties decreases their chances of having a sanction lifted. This belief leads to creating new accounts for each reconsideration request.

Google clarifies here that the evaluation process is tied to the domain, not the identity of the account submitting the request. The penalty history of a site remains attached to the site itself, regardless of how you access it in Search Console.

How does the reconsideration system actually work?

When you submit a reconsideration request, Google's teams analyze the site directly. They check if the violations identified at the time of the penalty have been corrected: removal of artificial links, elimination of duplicate content, cessation of cloaking practices, etc.

The Search Console account serves merely as a communication channel. It allows you to receive the initial notification, submit the request, and obtain the response. Nothing more.

What is the difference between a manual penalty and an algorithmic action?

A manual penalty appears in the "Manual Actions" tab of Search Console. It results from a human review and requires an explicit reconsideration request once the issues have been corrected.

An algorithmic action (like a drop after a Core Update) does not generate a formal notification. You cannot submit a reconsideration request for an algorithmic issue; you simply need to improve the site and wait for the next crawl cycle.

  • Reconsideration requests only concern manual penalties notified in Search Console
  • The processing is done site by site, regardless of the user account
  • Creating a new account does not reset the penalty history of the domain
  • The quality of the corrections made determines the lifting of the sanction, not the identity of the account
  • The same owner can manage multiple penalized sites from a single account without impact

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices?

Yes, and it aligns with what we have seen in the field for years. The sites that have their penalties lifted are those that have truly cleaned up their practices, not those that have changed their email address in Search Console.

However, some SEOs continue to sell the idea that a "clean account" improves chances. This is nonsense. Google has no reason to complicate its system with an absurd variable like the identity of the account submitting the request.

What nuances should be applied to this statement?

Google's clarification specifically concerns manual penalties. For algorithmic problems or sites that accumulate negative signals over time, the situation is different.

A domain with a long history of borderline practices may indeed have more difficulty regaining the trust of the algorithm, but this is not linked to the Search Console account. It is the domain itself that carries this reputation within Google’s systems. [To verify]: some consultants report that severely degraded sites sometimes achieve better results after migrating to a new clean domain, but Google has never officially confirmed that this strategy is recommended.

In what cases might this rule seem not to apply?

If you manage an agency with dozens of client sites, all grouped under the same Search Console account, and several accumulate penalties, you might feel like Google "knows" you. But it is not the account that is targeted.

What really happens: if you replicate the same mistakes across multiple sites (the same link schemes, the same content tactics), Google identifies these patterns at the site level, not from your account. Changing accounts will never mask these technical fingerprints.

If you receive repeated penalties on multiple domains you manage, the problem is not your Search Console account but your methodology. Stop the same practices across all your projects and seriously audit your approach.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely before submitting a reconsideration request?

Focus your efforts on the effective cleaning of the site. Clearly identify the reason for the penalty in the Search Console notification, correct each occurrence of the problem, document your actions.

For a penalty related to artificial links: disavow toxic backlinks, contact webmasters to remove links, eliminate over-optimized anchors. For low-quality content: remove or rewrite the affected pages, enhance the added value.

What mistakes should be avoided when requesting reconsideration?

Do not submit a reconsideration request if you have not truly corrected the issues. Google systematically rejects premature requests, and this delays a new attempt.

Avoid vague explanations like "we have improved the overall quality". Be specific: list the removed URLs, the number of disavowed links, and the content changes made. Human reviewers check these elements one by one.

How can you verify that your site is ready for reconsideration?

Conduct a complete post-correction audit. Crawl the site to ensure that no remnants of the sanctioned practices remain. Verify that the redirects are clean and that removed pages properly return 410 or 404.

Manually test several queries for which the site was ranked before the penalty. If you see no improvement after correction, it may be that the cleaning is incomplete or that another technical issue blocks the crawl.

  • Precisely identify the cause of the penalty in the Search Console notification
  • Thoroughly correct all identified issues (100% of occurrences, not 80%)
  • Document each corrective action with URLs and concrete evidence
  • Wait for the complete recrawl of the site before submitting the request
  • Write a detailed and factual reconsideration request, without beating around the bush
  • Never create a new Search Console account hoping to "start over"
Managing a manual penalty requires rigor and technical expertise. If you manage multiple sites or if the corrections require advanced skills (mass disavowal of links, redesign of content architecture), the support of a specialized SEO agency can accelerate the lifting of the sanction and help you avoid mistakes that would unnecessarily prolong the penalty period.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je utiliser le même compte Search Console pour plusieurs sites pénalisés ?
Oui, sans aucun problème. Google traite chaque site indépendamment. Le nombre de sites pénalisés dans votre compte n'affecte pas les décisions de réexamen.
Combien de temps après correction faut-il attendre avant de soumettre une demande de réexamen ?
Attendez que Google ait recrawlé les pages modifiées, généralement quelques jours à deux semaines selon la fréquence de crawl de votre site. Vérifiez dans Search Console que les nouvelles versions sont indexées.
Que se passe-t-il si ma demande de réexamen est rejetée ?
Google vous envoie une notification expliquant pourquoi. Analysez les raisons, corrigez les points manquants et resoumettez. Il n'y a pas de limite au nombre de demandes, mais chaque rejet allonge le délai.
Un site peut-il être pénalisé plusieurs fois pour des raisons différentes ?
Oui, absolument. Vous pouvez avoir simultanément une pénalité pour liens artificiels et une autre pour contenu de faible qualité. Chacune nécessite une correction spécifique et une demande de réexamen distincte.
La levée d'une pénalité manuelle restaure-t-elle immédiatement les positions ?
Non. La levée retire la sanction, mais le site doit ensuite reconquérir ses positions naturellement. Si des problèmes algorithmiques subsistent ou si la concurrence a évolué, le retour peut être partiel ou lent.
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