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Official statement

Migrating from HTTP to HTTPS generally does not negatively affect a site’s ranking. It is still the same website integrated in the same way into the web, and the HTTPS boost is too weak to be visible separately.
8:59
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 10:01 💬 EN 📅 01/09/2020 ✂ 7 statements
Watch on YouTube (8:59) →
Other statements from this video 6
  1. 1:36 Pourquoi HTTPS bloque-t-il l'accès à certaines fonctionnalités critiques pour le SEO ?
  2. 2:08 HTTPS booste-t-il vraiment le classement dans Google Search ?
  3. 2:40 Pourquoi migrer vers HTTPS déclenche-t-il les mêmes signaux qu'un déménagement de site complet ?
  4. 7:58 Faut-il vraiment maintenir les redirections HTTP vers HTTPS pour toujours ?
  5. 8:28 Combien de temps Google met-il vraiment à traiter une migration HTTPS ?
  6. 8:28 Les certificats SSL gratuits nuisent-ils au référencement Google ?
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Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that migrating from HTTP to HTTPS generally has no negative impact on rankings. The HTTPS boost signal is too weak to be noticeable in isolation. For an SEO practitioner, this means that the switch can be made without excessive concern, as long as proper technical redirection practices and Search Console declaration are followed.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize the absence of negative impact?

John Mueller's statement addresses a recurring concern among SEOs: losing rankings during a migration. Many equate the switch to HTTPS with a domain migration, which is not technically the case.

Google treats this transition as a permanent URL change, not as a new site. If 301 redirects are properly implemented and Search Console is updated, the algorithm transfers historical signals without substantial loss.

What does "too weak HTTPS boost" actually mean?

In 2014, Google announced that HTTPS would become a positive ranking signal. But Mueller clarifies here that this boost is marginal — impossible to isolate in a post-migration analysis.

Practically speaking? If you switch from HTTP to HTTPS without any other changes, you will likely not see a spectacular jump in the SERPs. The real benefits of HTTPS lie in user security and trust, not a measurable SEO advantage in the short term.

In what cases can we still observe a temporary drop?

Even though Google claims there is no intrinsic negative impact, technical errors can cause post-migration traffic drops. Poorly configured redirects, invalid SSL certificates, mixed content blocking critical resources — all classic pitfalls.

An HTTPS migration remains a delicate technical project. The risk does not come from the protocol itself, but from execution. If Search Console reports crawl errors or blocked resources post-transition, rankings may indeed suffer.

  • HTTPS does not penalize on its own if the migration is technically sound
  • The HTTPS boost is negligible compared to other ranking factors
  • Redirect or certificate errors can cause temporary drops
  • Search Console must be updated with the new HTTPS property
  • Historical signals are transferred if the 301 redirects are in place

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, generally speaking. Well-executed HTTPS migrations do not lead to any lasting declines in most cases. Practitioners' testimonials confirm that organic traffic remains stable, or even slightly improves due to parallel optimizations.

Conversely, describing the HTTPS boost as "too weak to be noticeable" is a polite way of saying it is virtually non-existent. A/B tests comparing two identical sites (one HTTP, the other HTTPS) have never revealed any statistically significant differences in pure ranking.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller discusses a "general" migration without specifying particular contexts. For an e-commerce site with thousands of pages and complex user sessions, switching to HTTPS may trigger analytics tracking issues or session management problems that indirectly lead to an apparent drop in performance.

Moreover, some poorly configured CMS or infrastructures generate duplicate content post-migration if HTTP versions remain accessible without strict redirection. Google eventually understands, but the consolidation time may take several weeks. [To be verified]: the speed of signal transfer varies according to crawl frequency — a small site with few backlinks may take longer than a high-traffic media site.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If the HTTPS migration comes with a change in URL structure (redesign, new hierarchy, abandonment of parameters), then all bets are off. Google can no longer automatically link old and new pages without a comprehensive redirection plan.

Another exception: sites that mistakenly block HTTPS crawling (incorrectly configured robots.txt on the new version) or do not declare the new property in Search Console. In such cases, Google may interpret the switch as a site disappearance, leading to a sudden loss of visibility.

Warning: An HTTPS migration without prior audit of resources (images, scripts, CSS) can lead to mixed content. Chrome and Firefox will then block certain elements, degrading user experience and potentially affecting Core Web Vitals — which indirectly impacts ranking.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do before and during the migration?

Start with a complete audit of existing URLs: crawl your site on HTTP, identify all indexed pages, existing redirects, and internal links. Ensure that your SSL certificate covers all necessary subdomains (www, non-www, any accessible staging subdomains).

During the migration, implement permanent 301 redirects from each HTTP URL to its HTTPS equivalent. Update all internal links to point directly to HTTPS — avoid redirect chains that slow down crawling and dilute PageRank.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never leave both versions (HTTP and HTTPS) accessible simultaneously without redirection. Google will eventually choose a canonical version, but in the meantime, you fragment your signals. Also, be cautious not to accidentally block crawling of the HTTPS version — check your robots.txt after the switch.

Another classic pitfall: forgetting to update Search Console. If you do not declare the new HTTPS property and do not submit a new sitemap, Google will crawl less frequently and the transfer of signals will be slowed. Also consider updating your strategic backlinks (directories, partners, press releases) to avoid unnecessary redirect chains.

How can you verify that the migration went well?

Monitor Search Console for any crawl errors, pages blocked by robots.txt, or certificate issues. Compare the number of indexed pages before/after migration: a sharp drop indicates an issue.

Use a tool like Screaming Frog to identify mixed content (HTTP resources loaded on HTTPS pages). Ensure that your canonical tags correctly point to HTTPS URLs. Finally, monitor your organic KPIs (impressions, clicks, average positions) for at least 4 to 6 weeks to detect any anomalies.

  • Implement permanent 301 redirects from HTTP → HTTPS on all URLs
  • Declare the new HTTPS property in Search Console and submit an updated sitemap
  • Update all internal links to point directly to HTTPS
  • Check for mixed content (HTTP resources on HTTPS pages)
  • Ensure the SSL certificate covers all necessary subdomains
  • Monitor crawl errors and the number of indexed pages for 4 to 6 weeks
A well-planned HTTPS migration poses no risk to your ranking if you adhere to technical fundamentals: clean redirects, declaration in Search Console, absence of mixed content. Given the marginal HTTPS boost, don't count on this switch to improve your rankings — consider it an essential security compliance measure. However, these technical optimizations may reveal unforeseen complexities depending on your technical stack. If you lack internal resources or want to secure each step, support from a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and expedite signal transfer.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une migration HTTPS peut-elle faire baisser mon trafic organique ?
Non, si les redirections 301 sont correctement configurées et que Search Console est mis à jour. Les baisses observées proviennent généralement d'erreurs techniques (mixed content, redirections cassées, certificat invalide), pas du protocole HTTPS lui-même.
Le boost HTTPS a-t-il un impact mesurable sur le classement ?
Non. Google a confirmé que ce signal de ranking est trop faible pour être isolé. Vous ne verrez aucun saut visible dans les SERPs uniquement grâce au passage HTTPS. Le bénéfice principal reste la sécurité et la confiance utilisateur.
Faut-il mettre à jour tous les backlinks après migration HTTPS ?
Idéalement oui, au moins pour les backlinks stratégiques. Les redirections 301 transfèrent le PageRank, mais mettre à jour les liens évite des chaînes de redirections inutiles qui ralentissent le crawl et diluent légèrement les signaux.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google transfère tous les signaux vers la version HTTPS ?
Généralement entre 2 et 6 semaines, selon la fréquence de crawl de votre site. Les sites à fort trafic et nombreux backlinks sont recrawlés plus rapidement. Surveillez Search Console pour suivre l'évolution du nombre de pages indexées en HTTPS.
Que faire si mes pages HTTPS n'apparaissent pas dans l'index après migration ?
Vérifiez que les redirections 301 sont en place, que la nouvelle propriété HTTPS est déclarée dans Search Console, et que votre robots.txt n'bloque pas le crawl HTTPS. Soumettez un sitemap à jour et demandez une inspection manuelle des URLs clés.
🏷 Related Topics
HTTPS & Security AI & SEO Redirects

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 10 min · published on 01/09/2020

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