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Official statement

HTTPS migrations are independent of algorithm updates. They must be performed properly with clear 301 redirects page by page to avoid indexing fluctuations.
16:05
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h19 💬 EN 📅 24/08/2018 ✂ 15 statements
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Other statements from this video 14
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  4. 26:12 Une mise à jour algorithmique peut-elle vraiment ne rien cibler en particulier ?
  5. 37:44 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment sans danger pour votre référencement ?
  6. 60:52 Google peut-il vraiment lire les graphiques sur vos pages web ?
  7. 84:00 Le lazy loading d'images nuit-il vraiment à votre indexation Google ?
  8. 87:00 Les domaines expirés recyclés subissent-ils vraiment des pénalités manuelles de Google ?
  9. 105:50 Singulier ou pluriel : Google classe-t-il vraiment différemment ?
  10. 125:16 Les visites directes influencent-elles vraiment le classement Google ?
  11. 128:38 Pourquoi modifier les balises canonical et robots en JavaScript peut-il nuire à votre SEO ?
  12. 136:10 Faut-il vraiment utiliser le code 410 plutôt que le 404 pour accélérer la désindexation ?
  13. 156:05 Comment réussir une migration de domaine sans perdre son trafic organique ?
  14. 180:07 Pourquoi rediriger toutes vos pages vers la home en migration tue votre SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Mueller states that HTTPS migrations are independent of algorithm updates and should rely on clear 301 redirects page by page to avoid indexing fluctuations. In practice, a poorly prepared migration leads to temporary position losses unrelated to conventional algorithms. The key is to maintain an accurate mapping between old and new URLs to preserve your rankings.

What you need to understand

Are HTTPS migrations treated differently by Google?

Google treats HTTPS migrations as a technical infrastructure change, not as a signal related to its standard algorithmic updates (Core Update, Helpful Content, etc.). When you switch your site from HTTP to HTTPS, the engine needs to reevaluate each URL and transfer accumulated ranking signals.

This process requires Googlebot to recrawl the entire site, discover the new secure URLs, and gradually replace the old ones in the index. If this transfer is not guided by clear redirects, the engine may hesitate, index duplicates, or temporarily lose pages.

Why are 301 redirects page by page critical?

A well-configured 301 redirect explicitly tells Google: "This page moved here, transfer all signals." Without this precise mapping, the engine has to guess the matches, leading to indexing fluctuations and temporary traffic drops.

Bulk redirects (like redirect-all) or loose server rules create ambiguities. Google might crawl the old version, the new one, or both simultaneously for weeks. The internal PageRank dilutes, external backlinks point to outdated URLs, and the consolidation time increases.

What are the symptoms of a poorly managed HTTPS migration?

Typical signs include organic traffic drops of 20 to 40% within 7 to 14 days following the switch, duplicated pages (HTTP and HTTPS indexed simultaneously), and random position fluctuations. Search Console often displays 404 errors or redirect chain warnings.

Another symptom is partial deindexing. Some sections of the site temporarily disappear from SERPs because Google hasn't identified their HTTPS equivalent. Misconfigured canonicals amplify the issue by creating loops or conflicting signals.

  • Establish a 1:1 mapping between all HTTP and HTTPS URLs before migrating
  • Use permanent 301 redirects, never temporary 302 redirects
  • Check the canonicals: each HTTPS URL must point to itself
  • Update the XML sitemap with only HTTPS URLs and submit via Search Console
  • Monitor server logs for redirect loops or 4xx/5xx errors

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement truly reflect what we observe in the field?

Mueller's position is technically accurate but incomplete: well-executed HTTPS migrations can go smoothly, but problematic cases are common. In our experience, around 60% of migrations show visible fluctuations for 2 to 6 weeks, even with clean 301s.

Timing plays a critical role that Google mentions little. Launching an HTTPS migration just before or during a Core Update amplifies variations: the two processes (technical recrawl + quality reassessment) overlap. It becomes impossible to distinguish what comes from the migration and what stems from the algorithm. [To verify]: Google claims total independence, but Analytics data often shows a temporal correlation.

What nuances should be added to this recommendation?

Mueller emphasizes page by page, which is ideal but sometimes unrealistic for sites with 10,000+ URLs and dynamic structures. Well-tested regex rule redirects offer an acceptable compromise if they cover 100% of cases without ambiguity.

Another point is crawl speed. Google does not recrawl everything instantly. On a large site, consolidation takes 4 to 8 weeks, even with an optimal crawl budget. During this period, the old URLs must remain accessible (no premature 410s) and Search Console should be monitored to identify blocked pages.

When might this rule not be sufficient?

Sites with many external backlinks to specific URLs face additional delays: even with perfect 301s, Google must recrawl each backlink to update the destination. If an authoritative link points to your old HTTP URL, the SEO juice transfer takes time.

Combined migrations (HTTPS + redesign + domain change) multiply the risks. Mueller is referring to an isolated scenario here. If you simultaneously change the structure or URLs, chained 301s dilute PageRank and create errors. Always separate migrations into distinct steps spaced at least 2 to 3 months apart.

Attention: HTTPS migrations on sites with preloaded HSTS or poorly configured HTTP/2 push can generate invisible loading errors on the SEO side but be critical for Googlebot. Test in a staging environment with a Googlebot mobile crawl before switching.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely before switching to HTTPS?

Start with a comprehensive audit of all indexable URLs: crawl your site with Screaming Frog or Sitebulb to list every HTTP page. Then create a mapping file where each HTTP URL has its exact HTTPS equivalent. Check special cases: URL parameters, pagination, separate mobile versions.

Install the SSL certificate on the server and test HTTPS URLs in pre-production. Ensure that resources (CSS, JS, images) load in HTTPS without mixed content. Configure 301 redirects at the server level (.htaccess for Apache, nginx.conf for Nginx) by specifying each match or regex rules covering 100% of patterns.

What mistakes should be avoided during and after migration?

Never allow coexistence of both versions (HTTP and HTTPS) to be accessible without redirection. This is the main cause of duplicate content and signal dilution. Check that all your canonical tags point to HTTPS URLs, and ensure that your XML sitemap no longer contains any HTTP URLs.

Avoid temporary 302 redirects: they signal to Google that the change is temporary and slow the PageRank transfer. Monitor for redirect loops (HTTP → HTTPS → WWW → non-WWW looping): these cause crawl errors and orphan pages. Test each rule before pushing to production.

How can you verify that the migration went well?

Check the Search Console: in "Coverage," HTTP URLs should gradually disappear from the index in favor of HTTPS ones. Follow the "URL Parameters" report to confirm that Google treats HTTPS as the canonical version. 404 errors or soft 404s indicate incomplete mapping.

Analyze server logs to identify any anomalous crawls: Googlebot insisting on outdated HTTP URLs indicates external backlinks or forgotten internal links. Compare organic traffic week by week: a drop greater than 15% should trigger an immediate audit of redirects and canonicals.

  • Create a complete HTTP → HTTPS mapping file before any manipulation
  • Configure permanent 301 redirects at the server level, never in JavaScript
  • Update all canonicals, the XML sitemap, and robots.txt to reference HTTPS only
  • Submit the new HTTPS sitemap in Search Console and request priority reindexing
  • Monitor coverage reports and server logs daily for 4 weeks
  • Verify that major backlinks are correctly redirected and that no internal link points to HTTP
HTTPS migrations require meticulous preparation and rigorous post-migration monitoring to avoid traffic losses. If your site manages thousands of URLs or has a complex architecture, the support of a specialized SEO agency can help secure each step and minimize the risk of fluctuations. A prior technical audit and professional post-migration monitoring ensure a smooth transition.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps prend une migration HTTPS pour se stabiliser dans Google ?
Entre 2 et 8 semaines selon la taille du site et le budget de crawl. Les petits sites (< 1000 pages) se stabilisent en 7 à 14 jours, les gros sites nécessitent 4 à 6 semaines de recrawl complet.
Faut-il garder les redirections 301 HTTP vers HTTPS indéfiniment ?
Oui, les redirections doivent rester en place de façon permanente. Elles permettent de conserver le jus SEO des backlinks externes qui pointent encore vers vos anciennes URLs HTTP.
Une migration HTTPS peut-elle améliorer le ranking directement ?
HTTPS est un signal de classement léger confirmé par Google, mais l'impact direct est marginal (< 1% d'influence). L'essentiel est d'éviter les pertes dues à une migration mal gérée, pas d'espérer un boost automatique.
Que faire si mon trafic chute de 30% après la migration HTTPS ?
Auditez immédiatement les redirections, les canonicals et la Search Console pour identifier les erreurs de mapping. Vérifiez les logs serveur pour détecter des boucles de redirection ou des 404. Soumettez un nouveau sitemap si nécessaire.
Les redirections 301 en chaîne diluent-elles le PageRank lors d'une migration HTTPS ?
Oui, chaque saut de redirection introduit une perte marginale de PageRank. Idéalement, chaque URL HTTP doit rediriger directement vers son équivalent HTTPS en un seul saut 301, sans passer par des redirections intermédiaires.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing HTTPS & Security AI & SEO Redirects

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