Official statement
Other statements from this video 10 ▾
- 1:36 Comment désavouer correctement des backlinks avec des caractères non-latins ?
- 3:51 Faut-il vraiment respecter la casse et la syntaxe des balises noindex et nofollow ?
- 4:49 Le .com handicape-t-il vraiment votre géociblage international ?
- 6:54 Pertinence et qualité du contenu : Google les évalue-t-il vraiment séparément ?
- 8:27 Les mots localisés dans vos URL influencent-ils vraiment votre classement Google ?
- 18:20 Les interstitiels mobiles peuvent-ils vraiment nuire à votre classement ?
- 24:39 Le passage en HTTPS résout-il vraiment les problèmes de filtre Panda ?
- 26:10 Les données structurées influencent-elles vraiment le classement Google ?
- 27:48 Les sous-répertoires peuvent-ils être pénalisés indépendamment du reste de votre site ?
- 46:24 L'indexation mobile-first change-t-elle vraiment votre stratégie SEO ?
Google states that hosting a blog on a subdomain (blog.site.com) or in a subdirectory (site.com/blog) does not produce significant SEO impact. This position encourages choices based on technical criteria such as security or website architecture. However, this apparent neutrality masks concrete differences in PageRank transmission and authority consolidation.
What you need to understand
Why does this question keep coming up in SEO?
The debate subdomain versus subdirectory has persisted for years because it addresses the very structure of a site's authority. A subdirectory directly shares the root domain, while a subdomain is technically treated as a separate entity by search engines.
This distinction isn't trivial. When you publish content in a subdirectory, each external link pointing to this content directly enhances the authority of your main domain. With a subdomain, the transmission is more diffuse.
Does Google really treat subdomains as separate sites?
Google's official stance has evolved. Historically, subdomains were considered autonomous entities with their own crawl budget and authority. This approach justified the use of subdomains for very distinct sections of a site.
Today, Google claims to manage this distinction more fluidly. The engine understands the relationships between main domains and subdomains. However, in practice, ranking signals do not propagate equally based on the chosen architecture.
What technical criteria truly justify the choice of a subdomain?
Mueller mentions technical reasons such as security. Specifically, a subdomain can operate on a separate infrastructure, with its own SSL certificates, security rules, and CMS. This isolation provides advantages for certain organizations.
For example, a large company might host its corporate blog on a light CMS in a subdomain, while its main e-commerce site operates on a complex and secure infrastructure. This separation reduces contamination risks in case of vulnerability. However, this scenario concerns a minority of sites.
- Subdirectories directly transmit the authority of the root domain to each published blog page
- Subdomains potentially dilute this transmission by creating a structural barrier, even if Google claims to manage it
- The technical choice (security, infrastructure) should only be made if the separation offers a real operational benefit
- The consolidation of authority remains more direct and measurable with a subdirectory in most cases
- Google can understand the relationships between subdomains and the main domain, but this does not guarantee equivalent signal transmission
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement really reflect what we observe on the ground?
Let’s be honest: Mueller's assertion contradicts years of empirical observations. A/B tests conducted by agencies on migrations from subdomain to subdirectory regularly show organic traffic gains of 10 to 25% in the following months. This is not trivial.
The difference likely resides in the nuance of the term “significant SEO impact.” For Google, which juggles billions of pages, the distinction may seem marginal. For a site struggling for every position on page 1, this architectural difference can be game-changing. [To be verified]: Google has never published quantitative data on this issue.
In what cases is a subdomain still justifiable?
Some contexts legitimize a subdomain. Multi-local platforms often use geographic subdomains (fr.site.com, de.site.com) to clearly isolate each market. The geolocation signals are then clearer for Google.
Companies with very distinct product lines can also benefit from subdomains to avoid diluting the main message of the root domain. But be careful: this strategy requires a massive content production on each subdomain to build autonomous authority. If the blog only publishes one article per month, the subdomain will remain weak.
What interpretation error should be absolutely avoided?
The classic mistake is to read this statement as a green light to multiply subdomains thoughtlessly. Just because Google “manages” the distinction does not mean it treats the two architectures on strict parity. The consolidation of authority remains a fundamental principle of SEO.
Another pitfall: justifying a subdomain choice based on imaginary technical constraints. If your CMS allows you to manage a blog in a subdirectory without compromising security or performance, it is almost always the best option. Don’t create unnecessary complexity.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you launch a new blog today?
The default choice should be the subdirectory. You immediately benefit from the authority accumulated by your main domain, and each link gained by a blog post directly strengthens the entire site. This is a consolidation strategy.
Configure your CMS to make the blog accessible via site.com/blog or site.com/news. Ensure that the URL structure remains consistent with the rest of the site, and that the internal linking naturally connects articles to relevant commercial pages.
How to manage an existing blog on a subdomain?
If your blog has been running for years on blog.site.com with stable traffic, migration isn’t always relevant. First, analyze the backlink profile of the subdomain: how many referring domains point to it? What is its autonomous organic visibility?
If the subdomain has developed its own significant authority, you risk temporarily losing traffic by migrating, even with perfect 301 redirects. On the other hand, if the blog stagnates or its authority remains weak after several years, migrating to a subdirectory might unlock the situation. Test with a sample of content before switching everything.
What technical checks ensure an optimal architecture?
Whatever your choice, some points are non-negotiable. The crawl budget must be respected: avoid content duplication between the main domain and subdomain. Canonical tags should point correctly, and XML sitemaps should reflect the actual structure.
Also verify the consistency of the internal linking. A blog in a subdirectory makes natural linking from content pages to articles easier, and vice versa. With a subdomain, this linking needs to be explicitly constructed; otherwise, the two entities remain isolated. Google Search Console allows you to track the performance of each part separately.
- Always prefer a subdirectory for any new blog unless documented technical constraints exist
- Audit the backlink profile and authority of an existing subdomain before considering migration
- Implement permanent 301 redirects if migrating from a subdomain to a subdirectory
- Monitor performance in Google Search Console for 3 to 6 months post-migration to catch any abnormal loss
- Ensure that the internal linking organically connects the blog and main pages, regardless of the architecture
- Document every architectural decision with measurable criteria rather than intuitions
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un blog en sous-domaine peut-il ranker aussi bien qu'un blog en sous-répertoire ?
Les backlinks vers un sous-domaine profitent-ils au domaine principal ?
Faut-il migrer un blog historique en sous-domaine vers un sous-répertoire ?
Quelle architecture privilégier pour un site multilingue ?
Comment mesurer l'impact d'une migration de sous-domaine vers sous-répertoire ?
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