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Official statement

Changing domains, even with a different TLD, does not affect SEO as long as the content remains relevant.
1:09
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h34 💬 EN 📅 29/08/2014 ✂ 13 statements
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  9. 46:36 Le secteur du voyage est-il vraiment sur-filtre par les algorithmes de Google ?
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📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that a change of domain, even with a different TLD, does not impact SEO as long as the content remains relevant. Properly configured 301 redirects transfer authority and ranking signals. In practice, a domain migration requires flawless technical execution to avoid temporary traffic and position losses.

What you need to understand

What does Google really mean by this statement?

Google guarantees that changing your domain name does not inherently penalize your SEO. Whether you transition from a .com to a .fr, from an old brand to a new one, or completely change your structure, the search engine pledges to maintain your SEO gains.

The condition? That the content remains relevant and that proper migration practices are followed. Google transfers ranking signals from one domain to another via permanent redirects. PageRank, backlinks, history: everything theoretically follows the new domain.

Why does this claim seem counterintuitive to many?

Many SEO professionals dread domain migrations. There are frequent tales of sites that have lost 30 to 50% of their organic traffic after a change. These cases are real.

However, the issue rarely arises from the domain change itself. It usually stems from poor execution: missing redirects, incorrect URL mapping, unanticipated structure changes, content altered during migration. Google does not penalize the domain change; rather, it penalizes the technical amateurism that often accompanies it.

What is the true meaning of the term 'relevant content'?

Google does not clarify what it means by relevant content, and this is where it gets vague. Does it simply mean keeping the same content word for word? Or can improvements, restructuring, and optimization happen simultaneously?

In practice, as long as the search intent remains served and the pages satisfy the same queries, you're in the clear. However, if you take the opportunity of the migration to radically change your editorial positioning, revamp your categories, or delete entire sections of content, Google will need to reassess your site. And at that point, yes, you risk fluctuations.

  • A well-executed domain change does not penalize SEO according to Google
  • 301 redirects transfer authority and ranking signals between domains
  • Content must remain relevant to the same search intents
  • Technical errors during migration are the real cause of observed traffic losses
  • Google does not differentiate TLDs (.com, .fr, .io) in terms of ranking capability

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?

Yes and no. Well-executed migrations often go smoothly or experience minimal temporary fluctuations. I have seen sites retain 95%+ of their organic traffic after a domain change, returning to normal in 2-3 weeks.

But I have also witnessed disasters. Sites that took 6 months to recover their initial traffic level. The problem? In 90% of cases, it was due to avoidable errors: incomplete mapping, chain redirects, undocumented URL structure changes, content altered without a clear strategy.

What nuances should we consider regarding this statement?

Google states that it does not affect SEO. Let's be precise: it does not affect the ranking potential. However, there is inevitably a transition period during which Google recrawls, reassesses, and transfers signals.

During this phase, which typically lasts 2 to 6 weeks, you may observe fluctuations. Some pages may temporarily lose positions. Others may stagnate in crawling. This is not a penalty; it's an algorithmic processing delay. [To be verified]: Google does not provide any official figures on the average duration of this transition or the factors that speed it up.

In what situations does this rule not fully apply?

If you change domains AND deeply modify your content, structure, or positioning, you are no longer testing a single variable. You are undergoing a complete overhaul. Google will have to reassess your site as if it were partially new.

Another scenario: if your old domain had active manual or algorithmic penalties, they usually do not follow the new domain. But if the problematic content remains the same, you risk encountering similar issues quickly. The problem is not the domain change; it is the content itself.

Warning: A domain change does not magically cleanse a problematic SEO history. If your old domain was penalized for link spam, thin content, or black hat practices, resolving these issues first before migrating is essential. Otherwise, you are transferring your problems to the new domain.

Practical impact and recommendations

What practical steps should be taken before changing your domain?

First and foremost, audit the existing setup. List all URLs that generate organic traffic, all quality backlinks, and all indexed pages. This inventory is your roadmap for creating a comprehensive redirect mapping.

Next, choose your new URL structure. If you keep the exact same hierarchy, it’s simpler. If you're restructuring, document each change in a spreadsheet: old URL → new URL. No approximations tolerated. One forgotten URL could be a strategic page that loses all its traffic.

What mistakes should absolutely be avoided during migration?

The first mistake: chain redirects. If old-domain.com/page redirects to intermediate.com/page which redirects to new-domain.com/page, you dilute authority and prolong crawling. Always redirect directly from the old URL to the new final URL.

The second mistake: modifying content at the same time as the domain change. Change one variable at a time. Migrate first, stabilize, then optimize the content. Otherwise, you'll never know if a drop is due to the migration or your editorial changes.

How can you verify that the migration was successful?

Monitor Google Search Console daily for the first 4 weeks. Check the indexing of the new domain, crawling errors, and broken redirects. Compare organic traffic week by week via Analytics.

If a strategic page loses positions, ensure it is correctly redirected in 301, that the redirect points to the correct URL, and that the target content is equivalent. Immediately correct any anomalies detected. The quicker you respond, the less enduring the impact will be.

  • Establish a comprehensive mapping old URL → new URL without exception
  • Configure all 301 redirects server-side before switching the DNS
  • Declare the address change in Google Search Console
  • Update all controllable backlinks (social profiles, directories, partners)
  • Keep the old domain active with redirects for at least 6 months, ideally 1 year
  • Monitor traffic and positions daily for the first 4 weeks
A domain migration is a demanding technical project that requires skills in development, server infrastructure, and SEO analysis. If your internal team lacks experience with this type of operation or if you prefer to secure this critical transition, hiring a specialized SEO agency can be wise. Expert support dramatically reduces the risks of error and accelerates post-migration stabilization.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google transfère complètement les signaux vers le nouveau domaine ?
Entre 2 et 6 semaines en moyenne, parfois plus selon la taille du site et la fréquence de crawl. Google doit recrawler toutes les pages, suivre les redirections et mettre à jour son index.
Dois-je conserver l'ancien domaine indéfiniment avec les redirections ?
Non. Maintenir les redirections 301 pendant 6 à 12 mois est suffisant pour que Google transfère tous les signaux et que les backlinks soient consolidés. Après cette période, l'ancien domaine peut être abandonné.
Un changement de .com vers .fr impacte-t-il différemment qu'un changement entre deux .com ?
Non, Google traite tous les TLD de manière équivalente pour le transfert de signaux. Un .fr peut ranker aussi bien internationalement qu'un .com. Seule la géolocalisation implicite peut différer.
Les backlinks vers l'ancien domaine perdent-ils de leur valeur après la migration ?
Non, tant que les redirections 301 sont en place, Google transfère la valeur des backlinks vers les nouvelles URLs. La dilution est minime voire inexistante selon les déclarations officielles.
Faut-il attendre que Google ait entièrement reindexé le nouveau domaine avant de supprimer l'ancien ?
Oui, absolument. Vérifiez dans Search Console que le nouveau domaine est indexé, que les impressions et clics ont migré, et attendez plusieurs semaines de stabilité avant d'envisager de couper l'ancien.
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