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Official statement

Google tracks 301 redirects between different domains and often chooses a URL to show in search results. However, if the old brand is searched, Google may display its content to meet user expectations.
36:57
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 51:25 💬 EN 📅 20/10/2014 ✂ 11 statements
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Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google tracks 301 cross-domain redirects and typically prioritizes a single URL in its search results. However, the mechanics are not binary: when a user explicitly searches for the old brand, the engine may display the old domain to match intent. For practitioners, this means that a domain migration never completely erases the old site from the SERPs, especially if brand recognition remains strong.

What you need to understand

Why does Google sometimes keep the old URL despite the 301 redirect?

The standard logic would suggest that a permanent 301 redirect fully transfers authority and visibility to the target domain. In most cases, this is exactly what occurs: Google consolidates signals, and only the new URL appears in results.

However, the engine incorporates a user intent dimension. If someone explicitly types the old brand name in the search bar, displaying the new domain can create cognitive friction. The user searches for "OldBrand", expecting to see a domain containing that term. Therefore, Google may decide to show the old URL, even if it redirects, to precisely meet the expectation.

Is this decision automatic or driven by specific signals?

Google does not detail the exact algorithm, but several likely triggers can be identified. The volume of branded queries on the old name plays an obvious role. If thousands of monthly sessions still type "OldDomain.com" or "Old Brand", the engine registers this pattern as a strong signal.

The freshness of the migration also counts. The more recent the domain change, the longer Google maintains a transition period during which both URLs can coexist in the SERPs depending on context. Lastly, the anchoring of external links: if thousands of backlinks still point to the old domain with the historical anchor text, this reinforces the legitimacy of this URL as a relevant answer for certain queries.

What is the lifespan of this potential double presence?

There is no official timeline. Field observations show a strong variability depending on sectors. An e-commerce site with high recognition may see its old domain persist in brand results for months or even years if redirects remain active and brand searches continue.

In contrast, a niche site with low query volume for the brand will see consolidation occur in a few weeks. Google adjusts its behavior according to the signal-to-noise ratio: as long as the old domain receives direct queries and generates clicks, it remains eligible for contextual display.

  • Google indeed tracks cross-domain 301s and generally consolidates signals on the new URL.
  • User intent prevails: for explicit brand queries, the old domain may remain visible.
  • The duration of coexistence depends on brand traffic volume and the speed of external signal migration.
  • 301 redirects must remain active indefinitely to avoid any loss of SEO juice or user confusion.
  • No guaranteed timeline: Google adapts its treatment based on context and observed behaviors.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with what we observe in the field?

Yes, largely. Domain migrations do show this temporary coexistence in the SERPs. A classic case: a company acquires a competitor, redirects everything to its main domain, but continues to see the old site appearing for queries like "login old-domain.com" or "contact acquired brand".

What is missing in this statement is the granularity. Google does not specify how it weighs conflicting signals. If the old domain still generates high organic CTR for certain queries, how long will Google maintain this visibility? [To verify] on larger data sets, but available case studies suggest that direct traffic volume remains the determining factor.

What risks does this mechanism pose for poorly prepared migrations?

The main danger is unintentional cannibalization. If you launch a new brand but leave the old one active with 301s, you may fragment your authority. Google hesitates between two URLs, dilutes signals, and ends up displaying the old one for certain queries while you wanted to completely bury that identity.

Another trap: chained redirects. If you redirect A to B, then B to C, Google follows, but with a gradual loss of PageRank and an increasing delay in consolidation. Observations show that each additional hop in the chain increases the risk that Google maintains an intermediate URL visible for specific queries.

In what cases does this rule not apply as expected?

When conflicting signals are too strong. If you redirect a domain but the old site remains partially accessible (misconfigured DNS, orphan subdomains), Google may consider that there is no clear migration and continue to index both as distinct entities.

Manual penalties also change the game. If the old domain was under sanction, the 301 does not necessarily transfer this penalty, but Google may choose not to consolidate signals until the situation is clarified via Search Console. Lastly, international migrations (ccTLDs to gTLD with hreflang) add a layer of complexity where both URLs can legitimately coexist based on the user's geolocation.

Attention: If you plan a domain migration for rebranding reasons, anticipate that the old brand name will continue to trigger the display of the old URL for an indeterminate period. Prepare your support and communication teams to manage this gradual, not binary, transition.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should be taken during a domain migration?

First, map all URLs of the old domain, not just the main pages. Omissions (old blog posts, seasonal landing pages, PDF files) create missing redirects that fragment authority. Use a crawler to extract the entire indexed structure.

Next, implement 301 page-to-page redirects, not a global redirect to the homepage. If the old page /product-a corresponds to the new /catalog/product-a, the 301 must be direct. Bulk redirects to the root of the new domain dilute relevance and slow consolidation of signals.

How to manage the transition period in Search Console?

Declare the change of address using the dedicated tool in Search Console. This feature accelerates the transfer of signals and reduces the period of double indexing. But be careful: it only works for complete domain to complete domain migrations, not for partial content relocations.

Monitor the coverage reports on both properties (old and new domain) for at least 6 months. If URLs from the old domain remain indexed without redirection, correct immediately. If Google consistently displays the old URL for strategic queries despite the 301, assess whether it is a real conversion problem or just a perception issue.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never remove 301 redirects after a few months. Some practitioners believe that once the migration is "complete," they can remove the 301s to clean up the infrastructure. Mistake: backlinks continue to come in on the old domain for years, and these links lose all value if the redirect disappears.

Avoid also making substantial content changes at the same time as the migration. If you change domains AND rewrite all your pages, Google has to process two variables simultaneously, which slows consolidation. Migrate first, stabilize traffic, then gradually optimize content.

  • Thoroughly crawl the old domain to identify all indexed URLs
  • Implement individual 301 redirects, never in bulk to the root
  • Declare the change of address in Search Console to speed up the transfer
  • Keep 301 redirects active indefinitely, not just for 6 months
  • Monitor both Search Console properties for at least 12 months
  • Do not modify background content during the initial migration period
Domain migrations remain high SEO risk operations. The mechanics described by Google show that there is no instant switch: the engine manages a transition period where both URLs can coexist depending on the search context. To minimize traffic losses and maximize consolidation speed, every technical detail matters. These optimizations require sharp expertise and rigorous monitoring. If your migration concerns a high-stakes business site, it may be wise to partner with a specialized SEO agency that can anticipate pitfalls and adjust the strategy in real time based on signals observed in the SERPs.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une redirection 301 cross-domaine transfère-t-elle 100% du PageRank ?
Google affirme que les 301 transfèrent l'essentiel du PageRank, mais aucune garantie de 100%. Les observations terrain suggèrent une perte marginale, augmentée si des redirections en chaîne s'ajoutent.
Combien de temps faut-il maintenir une redirection 301 après migration ?
Indéfiniment. Les backlinks continuent d'arriver pendant des années sur l'ancien domaine. Supprimer la 301 revient à perdre cette autorité accumulée.
Peut-on forcer Google à n'afficher que la nouvelle URL même pour des requêtes de l'ancienne marque ?
Non, pas directement. Google décide selon l'intention utilisateur. Vous pouvez accélérer la bascule en renforçant les signaux brand sur le nouveau domaine (campagnes, backlinks, mentions presse).
Que se passe-t-il si on redirige un domaine pénalisé vers un domaine sain ?
Google ne transfère généralement pas les pénalités manuelles via 301, mais peut retarder la consolidation des signaux. Une demande de réexamen sur l'ancien domaine avant migration est recommandée.
Les redirections 302 ont-elles le même effet que les 301 pour une migration permanente ?
Non. Les 302 signalent un déplacement temporaire. Google peut ne pas consolider les signaux aussi rapidement, voire maintenir l'ancienne URL indexée comme principale. Utilisez toujours des 301 pour une migration définitive.
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