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When a new site is built on an expired domain, Google attempts to recognize this change and ignore the domain's past as much as possible. However, problems from the old site (like spam links) can persist.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:55 💬 EN 📅 25/09/2020 ✂ 21 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to reset the history of expired domains when a new site is built on them, ignoring the domain's past as much as possible. This means that a new owner should not automatically inherit the PageRank or authority of the old site. However, ongoing issues like spam backlinks or penalties can still harm the site, making the purchase of expired domains riskier than it seems.

What you need to understand

Why does Google reset the history of an expired domain?

The goal is to prevent manipulation of search results through the purchase of expired domains solely for their link history. For years, this practice has been exploited: buying an old domain with good backlinks, building a new site on it, and enjoying an artificial boost in SERPs.

Google has gradually toughened its stance. The reset aims to neutralize this advantage by treating the domain as if it starts from scratch. This means that the positive accumulated signals (authority, trust, PageRank) are supposed to be ignored as soon as the engine detects a change in ownership or radical content change.

How does Google detect a change in ownership of a domain?

Mueller remains vague about the exact method — which is typical. It can be assumed that Google analyzes several break signals: complete change in site structure, new content unrelated to the old, modification of crawl patterns, disappearance of indexed old content, change of host or IP.

Some SEOs observe that the reset is not instant. It can take several weeks or months before Google fully treats the domain as new. During this period, the site may experience significant fluctuations in rankings.

Can the problems of the old site really persist?

This is where the statement becomes problematic. Mueller acknowledges that spam links and other issues can continue to impact the new site. In other words, Google resets positive signals, but not necessarily the negative ones.

In practice, this means that a domain that has undergone a manual or algorithmic penalty can keep that stigma even after a change of ownership. The toxic backlinks accumulated by the old site remain in the link profile, and the new owner must actively manage them via the Disavow Tool.

  • Google tries to reset the positive history of an expired domain to prevent abuse
  • Change detection relies on break signals (content, structure, hosting)
  • Inherited problems (spam, penalties, toxic backlinks) may persist and harm the new site
  • The reset is not instant and can take several weeks or months
  • A complete audit of the link profile is essential before building on an expired domain

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Partially. SEOs who regularly buy expired domains report highly variable results. Some domains clearly retain some of their authority for months, while others seem to truly start from scratch. The reset is therefore neither systematic nor immediate — [To be verified] according to the exact criteria used by Google.

The problem is that Mueller does not provide any metrics to know when and how this reset is triggered. Will a reactivated domain with similar content be treated differently than a domain that has been redirected to a completely new theme? No clear answer.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First point: Google says it tries to recognize the change. This is not a guarantee. It suggests that detection is imperfect, and some domains may escape the reset, either intentionally or not.

Second point: the persistence of issues from the old site partially contradicts the idea of a complete reset. If Google really ignores the past, why would spam backlinks continue to be problematic? Either Google resets everything, or it only resets part — and in that case, one needs to know which part.

Note: Buying an expired domain solely for its link profile remains a high-risk strategy. Positive signals may disappear while negative signals persist, creating an unfavorable ratio.

When does this rule not apply?

If the new site maintains a thematic continuity with the old one (same sector, same type of content), Google may not trigger a complete reset. This is especially the case when acquiring a business where the domain remains active in its field of activity.

Similarly, a domain that expired by mistake and is quickly reclaimed by its former owner should logically not undergo a reset. But again, Google does not specify where the line is drawn — [To be verified] on a case-by-case basis.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do before buying an expired domain?

First step: audit the complete history of the domain via Wayback Machine, Ahrefs, Majestic, or SEMrush. Identify past themes, content that was hosted there, and especially check for any signs of penalties or spam.

Second step: analyze the backlink profile in detail. A high ratio of toxic links is a major red flag. If the domain has been used for spam, PBNs, or dubious content, steer clear — the cleanup cost far exceeds the potential benefit.

How can you minimize risks after purchase?

Upon acquisition, disavow suspicious backlinks using Google Search Console's Disavow Tool. Don't rely on the idea that Google will automatically ignore the past — spam links can continue to be harmful for months.

Next, build a site with original and quality content unrelated to the old site, unless you want to maintain a legitimate thematic continuity. Avoid massively redirecting old content to new pages without relevance — this can be interpreted as an attempt to manipulate.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Never buy an expired domain solely for its superficial metrics (DA, DR, TF). These indicators do not necessarily reflect the real value of the domain after a reset by Google.

Also, avoid building a minimal or low-quality site thinking the domain's authority will do the work. If Google genuinely resets the history, you start from scratch — and mediocre content will have no traction.

  • Audit the domain’s history (Wayback Machine, Ahrefs, Majestic)
  • Analyze the backlink profile and identify toxic links
  • Disavow spam backlinks immediately upon acquisition of the domain
  • Create original and quality content, without forced continuity with the old site
  • Monitor fluctuations in Google Search Console during the first months
  • Never rely solely on third-party metrics (DA, DR) without thorough auditing
Purchasing expired domains has become a significantly riskier strategy with this reset. If you're considering this approach, a thorough technical audit is essential. These checks can be complex to undertake alone, especially for evaluating the toxicity of a link profile or anticipating Google’s reactions. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can secure the operation and avoid costly traps — particularly when it comes to cleaning up a polluted history or constructing a coherent relaunch strategy on a freshly acquired domain.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google réinitialise-t-il automatiquement tous les domaines expirés ?
Non, Google essaie de détecter les changements mais la réinitialisation n'est ni systématique ni instantanée. Certains domaines conservent des signaux pendant des mois.
Les backlinks d'un domaine expiré sont-ils encore pris en compte après rachat ?
Selon Mueller, Google tente d'ignorer le passé du domaine, mais les liens spam peuvent persister et nuire au nouveau site. Il faut donc désavouer les liens toxiques manuellement.
Un domaine expiré ayant subi une pénalité est-il toujours pénalisé après reprise ?
C'est possible. Google affirme réinitialiser l'historique, mais les problèmes de l'ancien site peuvent persister, y compris les pénalités algorithmiques ou manuelles.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google réinitialise un domaine expiré ?
Google ne donne pas de délai précis. Les observations terrain montrent que cela peut prendre plusieurs semaines à plusieurs mois selon les signaux de rupture détectés.
Est-il encore pertinent d'acheter des domaines expirés pour leur autorité ?
C'est devenu beaucoup plus risqué. Si Google réinitialise effectivement l'historique, l'autorité héritée disparaît tandis que les problèmes (spam, pénalités) peuvent rester.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Penalties & Spam

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