Official statement
Other statements from this video 43 ▾
- 2:22 What should you do if your site lost traffic after a Core Update without making any mistakes?
- 2:22 Are Core Web Vitals Really Going to Transform Your SEO Strategy?
- 3:50 Does a ranking drop after a Core Update really indicate an issue with your site?
- 3:50 Should You Really Wait Before Optimizing Core Web Vitals?
- 3:50 Why is Google delaying the complete transition to the Mobile-First Index?
- 7:07 Can Google really delay Mobile-First Indexing indefinitely?
- 11:00 Why doesn't Google canonicalize URLs with fragments in sitelinks and rich results?
- 11:00 Do URLs with fragments (#) in Search Console mean you need to rethink your tracking and analysis strategy?
- 14:34 Why do the numbers from Analytics, Search Console, and My Business never match?
- 14:35 Why do your Google metrics never align between Search Console, Analytics, and Business Profile?
- 16:37 How are FAQ clicks really counted in Search Console?
- 18:44 Are mobile and desktop accordions really neutral for SEO?
- 18:44 Is it true that mobile accordion hidden content is indexed as visible content?
- 29:45 Does the rel=canonical via HTTP header really still work?
- 30:09 Does the HTTP header rel=canonical really work to manage duplicate content?
- 31:00 Why does Search Console still show 'PC Googlebot' on recent sites when Mobile-First Index is supposed to be the standard?
- 31:02 Is it true that all sites indexed after July 2019 default to Mobile-First Indexing?
- 33:28 Why does Google emphasize textual context in Search Console feedback?
- 33:31 Are Search Console tools really enough to solve your indexing problems?
- 33:59 Why are your pages still not indexed after 60 days in Search Console?
- 37:24 What happens when Google occasionally indexes HTTP instead of HTTPS even after an SSL migration?
- 37:53 Is it really necessary to combine both 301 redirections AND canonical tags for an HTTPS migration?
- 39:16 What really causes your sitemap to fail in Search Console and how can you effectively resolve the issue?
- 41:29 Is your brand disappearing from the SERPs for no apparent reason: can Google feedback really fix it?
- 44:07 Should you choose a subdomain or a new domain for launching a service?
- 44:34 Subdomain or New Domain: What Does Google Really Think for SEO?
- 45:27 Do Google penalties really spread between domains and subdomains?
- 48:24 Should you really overlook PageRank when deciding between a domain and a subdomain?
- 48:33 Do links between root domains and subdomains really pass PageRank?
- 49:58 Should you really be worried about duplicate content from scraping?
- 50:14 Can you relaunch an old domain without being penalized for duplicate content by spammers?
- 50:14 Should you really report every scraping URL via the Spam Report to prompt action from Google?
- 57:15 Is it really necessary to report spam URL by URL to assist Google?
- 58:57 Why does Google refuse to show your FAQs in rich results despite perfect markup?
- 59:54 Why doesn't Google display your FAQ rich results even with perfect markup?
- 65:15 Is it possible to add FAQs to your pages just to secure rich results in SEO?
- 65:45 Can you really add a FAQ just to get the rich result without risking penalties?
- 67:27 Should you still optimize rel=next/prev tags for pagination?
- 67:58 Should you really submit all paginated pages in the XML sitemap?
- 70:10 Should you really index all category pages to optimize your crawl budget?
- 70:18 Should you really stop placing category pages in noindex?
- 72:04 Does the number of JavaScript files really slow down Google indexing?
- 72:24 Does Googlebot really render all JavaScript in a single pass?
Google refuses to clarify whether a manual penalty on a main domain affects its subdomains or vice versa, to avoid revealing its anti-spam mechanisms. This deliberate opacity prevents SEOs from designing architectures that isolate risks. The official recommendation: never create content that could be penalized instead of relying on a hypothetical technical separation.
What you need to understand
Why does Google refuse to clarify this point?
Google's position is strategic and deliberate: revealing how penalties spread (or do not spread) between domains and subdomains would essentially be giving an instruction manual to spammers. If Google confirmed total isolation, every penalized site would immediately migrate to a subdomain to circumvent the sanction.
This deliberate opacity maintains a gray area that discourages attempts at optimization that borders on regulation. Google prefers that webmasters self-censor rather than speculate on technical loopholes.
What is the difference between a domain and a subdomain for Google?
Technically, Google treats subdomains as distinct but linked entities. They can have their own link profiles, separate Search Consoles, and independent indexing. But this technical separation does not imply total immunity.
The parent-child relationship between domain and subdomain does exist in Google's algorithms. A subdomain inherits some of the trust (or distrust) from the main domain, even though the exact degree remains unknown.
What does this non-disclosure mean for an SEO in practice?
This statement forces practitioners to adopt a conservative approach. It is impossible to build a multi-domain strategy on the assumption that penalties remain contained — the risk of contamination is always present.
Google pushes for total compliance rather than technical setups aimed at compartmentalizing risks. The underlying message: if you need to think about isolating certain contents for fear of penalties, those contents shouldn't exist in the first place.
- Google will never disclose the exact mechanisms of manual penalty propagation
- Subdomains are not bunkers — no guarantee of complete isolation
- The recommended strategy: total quality over technical compartmentalization
- Any complex architecture aimed at “protecting” certain sections likely reveals a compliance issue
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Documented cases show a variable and unpredictable propagation. Some penalized sites have seen their subdomains untouched, while others experienced immediate contamination. The consistency? It lies precisely in this apparent inconsistency — Google likely adjusts on a case-by-case basis.
Algorithmic penalties (historical Penguin, Panda) seemed more likely to respect subdomain boundaries than manual penalties. But with the integration of these algorithms at the core of the system, the distinction has become blurred. [To be verified] — no official data confirms this differentiated behavior.
What behaviors does this opacity actually encourage?
Paradoxically, the refusal of transparency may drive some players to test the limits. If Google says nothing, why not experiment — a risky but common logic among black hat SEOs. Opacity creates a playground for those willing to lose assets.
On the white hat side, this position reinforces the maximal precaution principle. Serious agencies and advertisers now avoid complex multi-subdomain architectures without a legitimate business reason, fearing a contaminated area could sabotage the whole.
Does Google really apply its own recommendations?
Let's be honest: Google itself uses hundreds of subdomains (maps.google.com, mail.google.com, etc.) for legitimate technical and organizational reasons. The recommendation does not aim to prohibit subdomains, but rather to discourage their use as a strategy to evade penalties.
The crucial nuance: Google distinguishes architectures justified by business logic (shop.brand.com, blog.brand.com) from artificial setups created solely to isolate dubious content. The issue is not the structure, it's the intent.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you manage multiple subdomains?
Document the business reason for each subdomain in an internal document. If you cannot clearly justify why certain content is on a subdomain rather than in a directory, it’s a warning sign. Architectural arbitrariness is rarely a good sign.
Audit each subdomain independently in Search Console. Check for manual messages, Core Web Vitals, indexing errors. Even if penalty propagation remains vague, granular monitoring allows you to detect issues before they spread.
How to design a penalty-resistant architecture?
Favor directories on a single domain unless you have a solid technical or editorial reason (language, distinct brand, incompatible technology). This approach simplifies management and avoids gray areas of penalty propagation.
If you must use subdomains, apply the same quality standards everywhere. No “test zone” on a sacrificial subdomain — Google can decide that this area contaminates the rest, leaving you with no recourse.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never create a subdomain as a last minute solution after a penalty. This tactic is documented, spotted, and often counterproductive. Google associates linked entities, and a suspicious move of penalized content to a new subdomain raises suspicion.
Avoid airtight silo architectures designed purely to isolate risk. If your technical flowchart looks like a money laundering scheme, something is wrong with your content strategy.
- Audit each subdomain separately in Search Console
- Document the business reasons for each technical separation
- Apply the same quality guidelines everywhere, without exception
- Never move penalized content to a subdomain to evade a sanction
- Favor directories unless there is a clear technical justification
- Monitor cross-signals between main domain and subdomains
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une pénalité sur mon domaine principal affecte-t-elle automatiquement mes sous-domaines ?
Puis-je migrer du contenu pénalisé vers un sous-domaine neuf pour échapper aux sanctions ?
Les sous-domaines sont-ils considérés comme des sites totalement séparés par Google ?
Vaut-il mieux utiliser des sous-domaines ou des sous-répertoires pour organiser mon site ?
Comment surveiller les pénalités sur une architecture multi-sous-domaines ?
🎥 From the same video 43
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 04/06/2020
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