Official statement
Other statements from this video 20 ▾
- 1:46 Les iframes de votre site sur d'autres domaines pénalisent-elles votre SEO ?
- 3:13 Les SPA peuvent-elles vraiment être indexées sans URL valides ?
- 3:14 Les URLs générées en JavaScript sont-elles vraiment indexables par Google ?
- 4:37 404 ou 410 : quelle différence pour la désindexation de vos pages mortes ?
- 5:17 Faut-il vraiment utiliser le code 410 plutôt que le 404 pour accélérer la désindexation ?
- 6:51 Le CMS que vous utilisez peut-il tuer votre référencement naturel ?
- 6:51 React JS est-il vraiment crawlé et indexé comme n'importe quel site classique par Google ?
- 7:31 Un changement de framework JavaScript peut-il vraiment casser votre référencement ?
- 9:56 Un même domaine avec 100 backlinks vaut-il vraiment un seul lien ?
- 9:56 Les backlinks multiples depuis un même domaine comptent-ils vraiment comme un seul lien ?
- 12:17 Fusionner deux sites via sous-répertoire : Google garantit-il vraiment une simple réindexation ?
- 13:03 Les redirections HTTPS font-elles vraiment perdre du trafic SEO ?
- 16:07 HTTP et HTTPS indexés simultanément : faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter du contenu dupliqué ?
- 17:45 Peut-on vraiment utiliser un seul profil social pour plusieurs sites multilingues sans risquer de pénalité ?
- 18:11 L'index mobile-first prendra-t-il vraiment six mois pour s'installer ?
- 19:42 Les alt texts d'images influencent-ils vraiment le classement d'une page dans Google ?
- 21:09 Intégrer des flux RSS externes améliore-t-il vraiment votre SEO ?
- 27:33 Pourquoi pointer toutes vos pages paginées vers la page 1 avec rel=canonical peut-il détruire votre indexation ?
- 37:08 AMP redistribue-t-elle vraiment le trafic mobile sans en générer davantage ?
- 40:01 Le code HTML bien rangé améliore-t-il vraiment le référencement ?
Google claims to manage 301 redirects effectively during an HTTPS migration, without loss of PageRank or lasting positioning. However, temporary traffic fluctuations are possible during the transition phase, as the algorithm reassesses all signals. In practical terms: an initial drop doesn't indicate a technical problem, but rather an algorithmic adjustment.
What you need to understand
Why is there this official statement on 301 redirects?
HTTPS migrations have long caused concerns among SEOs. The central question is: Does a 301 redirect dilute PageRank and cause a loss of positions? John Mueller clarifies: Google handles these redirects without penalty.
The context is straightforward. Before widespread HTTPS, each URL change posed a risk. Permanent redirects were seen as friction points where part of the SEO juice was lost. This official statement aims to reassure: migrating to HTTPS is not a leap into the unknown.
What does it really mean that “Google manages these redirects very well”?
This means that the transfer of PageRank is complete. A URL in HTTP that redirects to its HTTPS version retains its authority, backlinks, and history. The algorithm recognizes the continuity of content and doesn’t start from scratch.
However, Mueller points out that temporary fluctuations may occur. While Googlebot recrawls the site, reindexes new URLs, and updates its signals, traffic can fluctuate. This is not a permanent degradation, but rather a technical adjustment.
What are the limits of this reassuring statement?
Google does not specify how long these “temporary fluctuations” last. A few days? Several weeks? The absence of precise figures leaves room for interpretation. On high-traffic sites, a complete recrawl can take time.
Another point: Mueller mentions “any significant change on a site.” The HTTPS migration often coincides with other changes — redesign, structural changes, content cleanup. If traffic decreases, identifying the exact cause becomes complex. Is it the redirect or another factor?
- According to Google, 301 redirects to HTTPS do not lose PageRank.
- Temporary traffic fluctuations remain normal during the recrawl and reindexing phase.
- The exact duration of these fluctuations is not specified by Google, complicating anticipation.
- HTTPS migrations are often accompanied by other changes, making it difficult to isolate the cause of a drop in traffic.
- Close monitoring of crawl logs and Search Console is essential to detect anomalies.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Overall, yes. Well-prepared HTTPS migrations do not cause traffic collapse. Severe loss cases mainly concern sites with implementation errors: redirect chains, unaddressed mixed content, incorrectly configured SSL certificates.
However, the notion of “temporary fluctuations” remains vague. On sites with thousands of pages, some practitioners report adjustments lasting 4 to 6 weeks. Others notice stabilization in 10 days. The site's size, crawl frequency, and quality of internal linking play a crucial role.
What nuances should be added to this official position?
Mueller does not mention a crucial point: the management of old HTTP URLs in external backlinks. If thousands of links still point to the HTTP versions, every visit goes through a redirect. This can slow down the crawl and dilute the signal, even if PageRank is theoretically retained.
Another nuance: e-commerce sites with thousands of product listings may experience an accordion effect. Some pages are recrawled immediately, while others wait several weeks. As a result, part of the catalog remains temporarily invisible, leading to a drop in organic traffic. [To be verified]: Google has never published official data on the average duration of these transitions.
In which cases does this rule not apply as expected?
Problems arise when the HTTPS migration is accompanied by a redesign or CMS change. If the URL structure changes, the 301 redirect is not enough: canonical tags, sitemaps, and hreflang also need to be checked. An error in these elements can negate the benefits of the migration.
Another case: sites with a limited crawl budget. If Googlebot only visits a few times a month, the complete recrawl can take months. During this time, the old HTTP URLs remain cached, creating confusion. Large content platforms must anticipate this inertia and force the recrawl via Search Console.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely before and during migration?
Technical preparation is key. Before switching, audit all elements that depend on URLs: canonical tags, sitemaps, hreflang, structured data. Each internal link must point directly to the HTTPS version, without going through a redirect.
During the migration, monitor crawl logs to ensure Googlebot is following the redirects. If 404 errors or redirect chains appear, correct them immediately. Search Console must also be configured for the new HTTPS domain.
What mistakes should be avoided to prevent a migration disaster?
The first common mistake: forgetting to update internal backlinks. If every link goes through a 301 redirect, the site becomes slower, and the crawl budget dilutes. Google does follow the redirects, but this does not optimize anything.
The second trap: keeping old HTTP URLs active too long. Some sites keep both versions accessible for months, creating duplicate content. HTTP pages must be disallowed as soon as the HTTPS versions are stabilized.
How to check that the site is compliant after migration?
Start by crawling the site in HTTPS with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Check that no HTTP URL remains in the internal linking. Then, ensure that all major external backlinks point to HTTPS. If necessary, contact referring sites to update the links.
The Search Console should display an increasing indexing curve for HTTPS URLs and a decreasing curve for HTTP. If both curves remain flat or evolve in parallel, it indicates a problem with canonicalization or redirection.
- Audit all elements depending on URLs: canonical tags, sitemaps, hreflang, structured data.
- Configure Search Console for the new HTTPS domain before migration.
- Update all internal links to avoid unnecessary redirects.
- Monitor crawl logs to detect redirect chains or 404 errors.
- Force the recrawl of strategic pages via the URL inspection tool.
- Disallow old HTTP URLs once the HTTPS versions are stabilized.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les redirections 301 vers HTTPS font-elles perdre du PageRank ?
Combien de temps durent les fluctuations de trafic après une migration HTTPS ?
Faut-il mettre à jour tous les backlinks externes après la migration ?
Peut-on laisser les deux versions HTTP et HTTPS actives en parallèle ?
Comment forcer Google à recrawler rapidement les nouvelles URLs HTTPS ?
🎥 From the same video 20
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 45 min · published on 09/03/2017
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.