Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 9:29 Comment Google évalue-t-il vraiment la pertinence de votre site en continu ?
- 10:39 Pourquoi la levée d'une pénalité algorithmique prend-elle plusieurs mois ?
- 22:07 Les meta descriptions impactent-elles vraiment le référencement de votre site ?
- 25:50 Les liens cachés en mobile-first sont-ils vraiment pris en compte par Google ?
- 28:59 Les contenus cachés sur mobile pénalisent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
- 37:15 Peut-on vraiment utiliser noindex dans le fichier robots.txt ?
- 43:11 Les erreurs 404 causées par des liens externes cassés pénalisent-elles votre référencement ?
- 45:15 Le fichier disavow fonctionne-t-il vraiment et combien de temps faut-il attendre ?
- 45:29 Google ignore-t-il vraiment les liens spam ou faut-il encore s'en méfier ?
Google confirms that using subdomains (de, de-at, de-ch) to structure local German versions is valid but not mandatory. This statement opens the door to other architectures (subdirectories, distinct domains) without algorithmic penalty. The choice should be based on technical and business criteria, not an imposed SEO constraint.
What you need to understand
Why does Google specifically mention Germany, Austria, and Switzerland?
These three countries share a common language (German) but are distinct markets with different consumer habits, currencies, and regulations. This situation creates an architectural dilemma: should everything be grouped under one domain or should each market be separated?
Mueller addresses a recurring question among SEO practitioners: does Google penalize one architecture over another for this type of setup? His answer is clear: no, and it is up to the webmaster to choose based on their own preferences and constraints.
What does "according to preferences" really mean?
Google does not dictate an ideal architecture. You can opt for subdomains (de.example.com, de-at.example.com, de-ch.example.com), subdirectories (example.com/de/, example.com/de-at/), or even distinct domains (example.de, example.at, example.ch) if you have the resources.
What really matters is technical consistency: correct implementation of hreflang, effective localization of content, clear structure for users. The architecture itself is not a direct ranking factor. It's the quality of execution that makes the difference.
Are subdomains truly equivalent to subdirectories?
Officially, yes. Google treats subdomains and subdirectories similarly for indexing. But "similar" does not mean "identical" in practice.
Subdomains retain a certain algorithmic independence: they can be perceived as distinct entities, which may dilute the overall authority of the root domain. Subdirectories, on the other hand, concentrate all authority under one roof. This nuance deserves consideration depending on your context.
- Validation of multi-domain architecture: Google does not penalize any specific structure (subdomains, subdirectories, distinct domains)
- Hreflang is essential: whatever the architecture, hreflang tagging remains mandatory to avoid cannibalization between local versions
- Effective localization: content must be genuinely adapted (currency, legal notices, local expressions), not just translated
- No universal SEO rule: the choice depends on technical governance, budget, brand strategy
- Be mindful of crawl budget: multiplying subdomains can fragment crawls, especially if each version is large
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. Google has claimed for years that subdomains and subdirectories are algorithmically equivalent. However, practitioners regularly observe that subdirectories perform better in terms of authority transmission and Trust consolidation.
Why this gap between theory and practice? Because Google measures architecture as such, not the cumulative effect of link juice distribution or the thematic consistency encouraged by subdirectories. An isolated subdomain must build its own authority. [To be verified]: the real impact on internal PageRank remains unclear.
What mistakes should be avoided with this approach?
The first mistake is to multiply subdomains without strategic reason. If you choose de.example.com, de-at.example.com, and de-ch.example.com while the content is nearly identical, you create unnecessary fragmentation. Google won’t directly penalize you, but you will dilute your crawl resources and complicate analytics tracking.
The second trap is believing that hreflang is enough. No. If the content is not truly localized (prices in euros vs Swiss francs, GDPR mentions vs Swiss laws, idiomatic expressions), Google will detect improperly managed duplicate content. Hreflang is not a free pass to publish the same page three times.
When does this flexibility become an issue?
When technical teams do not understand the implications. I have seen architectures where each subdomain had its own CMS, its own server configuration, its own redirection rules. Result: canonical inconsistencies, contradictory hreflang, varying load times.
The other critical case is migration. Moving from subdomains to subdirectories (or vice versa) requires massive 301 redirects, a complete hreflang relabeling, and a transition phase during which Google reprocesses the entire structure. There is a high risk of temporary traffic loss if not managed properly.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you already manage a multi-domain website?
First, audit your current architecture. If you are using subdomains, check that each version has sufficient content volume to justify this separation. A subdomain with 20 orphan pages is a waste of crawl budget.
Next, check the hreflang tagging. Use a validator (Screaming Frog, Sitebulb) to detect errors: missing tags, incomplete cross-references, forgotten self-references. A misconfigured hreflang sabotages the entire architecture, regardless of what it is.
How to choose between subdomains and subdirectories for a new project?
If your budget and teams allow you to manage a single technical instance, choose subdirectories. They are easier to maintain, concentrate authority, and simplify analytics tracking. The only real advantage of subdomains is organizational separation (autonomous teams by country, distinct infrastructures).
If you choose subdomains, ensure that each version has a distinct editorial project: original content, local strategy, a dedicated internal linking plan. Otherwise, you will just duplicate efforts without measurable SEO benefits.
What mistakes to avoid during an inter-structure migration?
Never migrate without a comprehensive 301 redirect plan. Every URL of every subdomain must be mapped to its new destination. Mass 404 errors will devastate your organic traffic for weeks.
The second point: anticipate the reprocessing time by Google. A migration from subdomains to subdirectories may take 4 to 8 weeks before full stabilization. Plan for weekly monitoring of positions and crawl in Search Console. If your project is complex, these architectural optimizations require sharp expertise. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can secure the transition and limit the risks of organic losses.
- Verify that each subdomain or subdirectory has a sufficient content volume justifying its creation (minimum 50 unique pages)
- Audit hreflang tagging with a crawler: self-reference, reciprocity, consistency of language-region codes
- Ensure that content is genuinely localized (not just translated): currency, legal mentions, local expressions
- Monitor crawl budget by subdomain in Search Console (Exploration Statistics tab)
- Map all URLs in case of migration, with 301 redirects tested in pre-production
- Anticipate 4 to 8 weeks of transition when changing multi-domain architecture
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les sous-domaines diluent-ils vraiment l'autorité du domaine racine ?
Peut-on mélanger sous-domaines et sous-répertoires sur un même site ?
Le hreflang est-il obligatoire si j'utilise des sous-domaines distincts pour chaque pays ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une migration de sous-domaines vers sous-répertoires se stabilise ?
Un ccTLD (example.de) a-t-il un avantage SEO sur un sous-domaine (de.example.com) ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 51 min · published on 14/12/2017
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