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Official statement

Google handles 301 redirects by transferring as many signals as possible from the old URL to the new one during a site change or when moving to HTTPS. This process includes disavow files without starting anew.
28:26
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h01 💬 EN 📅 12/09/2014 ✂ 9 statements
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📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that 301 redirects transfer as many signals as possible from the old URL to the new one, including disavow files. Therefore, this process does not start from scratch during an HTTPS migration or domain change. It remains to define what 'as much as possible' means exactly and which signals might be lost along the way.

What you need to understand

What does Google say a 301 redirect actually transfers?

Google promises that 301 redirects transfer the majority of SEO signals from the old URL to the new one. Specifically, this includes PageRank, backlinks, domain trust, and even the disavow files you submitted.

The phrase 'as much as possible' remains deliberately vague. Google does not guarantee a 100% transfer, and some signals may dilute during the process. Crawl histories, some user behavior data, or temporal signals may not be fully preserved.

Why specify that disavowal is transferred?

This mention of the disavow file is not trivial. Before this clarification, many SEO professionals were unsure whether they needed to resubmit a disavow file after an HTTPS migration or a domain change.

Google confirms that you do not start from scratch: if you cleaned up your link profile before the migration, that work remains valid. The engine associates disavowals with the site entity, not just the original URL.

In what contexts does this rule apply?

Mueller explicitly mentions two use cases: site changes and moving to HTTPS. The first pertains to domain migrations or URL structure redesigns. The second has become nearly universal since Google has pushed for secure protocols.

However, the rule also applies to internal redirects, product URL changes, or content consolidations. Any properly configured 301 redirect triggers this transfer, as long as the signal is clear and the URLs are genuinely equivalent.

  • PageRank and backlinks are transferred during a properly set up 301 redirect.
  • Disavow files follow the URL and do not require resubmission.
  • The transfer is never 100%: some temporal or behavioral signals may get lost.
  • The quality of the migration (redirect chains, 404 errors, semantic consistency) affects the effectiveness of the transfer.
  • Two main use cases: domain migration and moving to HTTPS, but applicable to any strategic redirect.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we see in practice?

Overall yes. Well-executed migrations show nearly complete authority transfer, often within a few weeks. Rankings stabilize quickly, backlinks continue to provide juice, and positions do not collapse.

But the devil is in the details. Poorly executed migrations lose traffic, and this is not due to the 301 redirect itself. Redirect chains, degraded response times, loss of semantic relevance between the old and new URLs: all of this sabotages the transfer. [To be verified] whether Google applies a gradual degradation factor on overly long redirect chains.

Which signals are NOT transferred after all?

Google talks about 'as many signals as possible', not all. Fresh behavioral data disappears: historical click-through rates on the old URL in the SERPs, accumulated visit times, or navigation patterns specific to that URL.

Temporal signals may also partially reset: a page published three years ago undergoing migration may lose its historical anchoring. Google might treat it as a 'new' URL for a while, even if the content is identical. [To be verified] whether the first indexing date strictly follows the URL or if it can be inherited.

Should we still worry during an HTTPS migration?

No, it's become a non-issue. The transition to HTTPS is considered a minor technical change by Google for years. The transfer is nearly instantaneous, and measurable losses are negligible if the configuration is clean.

The real danger does not come from the redirect itself, but from ancillary configuration errors: poorly installed SSL certificate, mixed content, canonical settings incorrectly pointed to the HTTP version. An HTTPS migration should today be seamless if you follow the basics. If you lose traffic after moving to HTTPS, it's not the fault of the 301, but of your technical implementation.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you check before launching a migration with 301 redirects?

Start by mapping all high-value SEO URLs: pages generating organic traffic, URLs with strong backlinks, content ranking for strategic queries. Ensure that each old URL points to a semantically equivalent new URL.

Test the redirects in a pre-production environment. Use a crawler like Screaming Frog to detect redirect chains (A → B → C), infinite loops, or hidden 404 errors. Ensure that the HTTP status codes are indeed 301, not 302 or 307 which do not offer the same transfer guarantees.

What mistakes should absolutely be avoided during a migration?

Never redirect en masse to the homepage. This is the worst mistake: Google detects that the semantic match is broken and may ignore these redirects. Each old URL should point to its logical equivalent, even if it requires manual mapping.

Avoid redirect chains that slow down crawling and dilute the transfer of signals. If URL A redirects to B which redirects to C, configure A to point directly to C. Google follows chains, but it's inefficient and potentially penalizing.

How to verify that the transfer is working correctly after migration?

Monitor Google Search Console: impressions and clicks should gradually transfer to the new URLs. If the old URLs continue to generate traffic several weeks later, it's a sign that Google isn’t following the redirects or is still hesitating.

Use a ranking tracking tool to compare rankings before and after migration. A slight volatility is normal in the first weeks, but a sustained drop indicates a problem. Also, check that external backlinks point to the new URLs in tools like Ahrefs or Majestic.

  • Map each old URL to a new equivalent URL, never to the homepage by default.
  • Eliminate all redirect chains before going live.
  • Check HTTP codes: 301 only, never 302 or 307 for a permanent migration.
  • Test crawling in pre-production with a tool like Screaming Frog or Botify.
  • Monitor Search Console to detect 404 errors and track traffic transfer.
  • Monitor rankings for at least 6 weeks post-migration to identify any anomalies.
301 redirects are a powerful lever to preserve your SEO capital during a migration, but their effectiveness relies on flawless technical execution. Between URL mapping, managing redirect chains, and post-migration tracking, the pitfalls are numerous. If your migration project involves significant strategic stakes, engaging a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and ensure optimal transfer of your signals.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les redirections 301 font-elles perdre du PageRank ?
Non, Google affirme que les redirections 301 transfèrent la quasi-totalité du PageRank vers la nouvelle URL. Les pertes mesurables sont négligeables si la redirection est bien configurée et pointe vers un contenu équivalent.
Faut-il resoumettre un fichier de désaveu après une migration HTTPS ?
Non, Google transfère automatiquement le fichier de désaveu lors d'une redirection 301. Le travail de nettoyage des backlinks toxiques reste acquis, vous n'avez pas à recommencer.
Combien de temps faut-il maintenir les redirections 301 après une migration ?
Google recommande de maintenir les redirections au moins un an, idéalement indéfiniment. Les backlinks externes continuent de pointer vers les anciennes URLs pendant longtemps, et supprimer les redirections trop tôt casse le transfert de jus.
Une redirection 302 transfère-t-elle les signaux SEO comme une 301 ?
Officiellement, Google traite les 302 comme des 301 si elles sont maintenues longtemps. Mais pour une migration définitive, une 301 reste plus claire et évite toute ambiguïté sur votre intention.
Peut-on rediriger plusieurs anciennes URLs vers une seule nouvelle URL sans perdre de jus ?
Oui, mais seulement si les contenus sont réellement équivalents ou si vous consolidez des pages dupliquées. Sinon, Google peut interpréter cela comme une soft 404 et ignorer la redirection.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing HTTPS & Security AI & SEO Domain Name PDF & Files Redirects

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