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Official statement

The new Search Console now offers domain properties, allowing the grouping of different URL versions like HTTP, HTTPS, and subdomains under a single property.
4:26
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 07/03/2019 ✂ 10 statements
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  5. 22:01 La vitesse de page influence-t-elle vraiment le classement Google si les scores Lighthouse ne comptent pas ?
  6. 22:48 Faut-il vraiment investir dans AMP pour un site d'entreprise ?
  7. 24:24 Faut-il arrêter de cibler les variations de mots-clés en SEO ?
  8. 26:32 Les alertes Search Console sont-elles des pénalités déguisées ?
  9. 86:45 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il d'indexer vos pages dupliquées malgré vos efforts ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google now allows for the grouping of HTTP, HTTPS, www, and subdomains under a single domain property in Search Console. In practice, this simplifies data analysis and removes the hassle of juggling multiple distinct URL properties. However, this consolidation hides some technical nuances that must be understood to fully leverage the tool.

What you need to understand

Why is Google introducing this concept of domain property?

Before this feature, each URL variant — HTTP, HTTPS, with or without www, each subdomain — required a distinct property in Search Console. A site accessible via http://example.com, https://example.com, https://www.example.com, and https://blog.example.com necessitated four separate properties.

The problem? Analyzing overall performance became a logistical nightmare. Crawl, indexing, and traffic data were fragmented. It was impossible to have a consolidated view without exporting and manually cross-referencing reports.

What exactly is a domain property?

A domain property aggregates all protocol and subdomain variants under a single verified entity. It relies on a DNS verification (TXT record) rather than a verification via HTML file or meta tag.

This method proves that you control the root domain, not just a specific URL. Once validated, the property displays combined data from http://example.com, https://example.com, https://www.example.com, https://blog.example.com, etc.

What data is actually aggregated?

The domain property centralizes performance reports (impressions, clicks, CTR), indexing coverage data, crawl errors, and Core Web Vitals. Everything related to the entire domain becomes visible at a glance.

However — and this is where it sometimes gets tricky — certain specific configurations still require distinct URL properties. For example, if you wish to finely segment reports by subdomain or protocol, you lose granularity with the consolidated view.

  • DNS verification required: it is impossible to validate a domain property via meta tag or Google Analytics
  • Automatic consolidation: HTTP, HTTPS, www, subdomains aggregated without additional configuration
  • Reduced granularity: difficult to isolate the performance of a specific subdomain within the consolidated view
  • Simplified access: a single dashboard for the entire domain, ideal for overarching audits
  • Backward compatibility: classic URL properties remain available and functional

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?

Yes, in the majority of cases. Multi-protocol sites or those with multiple active subdomains clearly benefit from this consolidation. SEO agencies managing dozens of client properties save valuable time.

However, the reality is more nuanced for complex architectures. An e-commerce site with blog.example.com, shop.example.com, and help.example.com may sometimes need segmented analysis by subdomain. The domain property does not easily allow for granular filtering of this data — thus requiring the maintenance of parallel URL properties.

What limitations should you anticipate with this system?

First point: DNS verification requires a technical access that not all clients have. An external consultant without rights to the DNS zone cannot validate a domain property alone. This is a real operational barrier.

Second issue: consolidated data can mask certain protocol-specific anomalies. If Google is still heavily crawling an outdated HTTP version with improper redirects, this may go unnoticed in the overall view. [To be verified]: the granularity of error reporting by protocol remains unclear in the official documentation.

When might this feature not be sufficient?

For sites with a multi-domain strategy (exemple.fr, exemple.com, exemple.es managed separately), the domain property does not replace the need for separate properties by TLD. Each root domain remains an autonomous entity.

Similarly, if you are testing protocol migrations step by step — HTTPS enabled only on certain subdomains — the consolidated view muddles the waters. You will need to maintain classic URL properties to precisely track the impact of each phase.

Warning: do not delete your old URL properties immediately after setting up a domain property. Keep them for at least 3 to 6 months to compare data and spot any inconsistencies in aggregation.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should you take to activate a domain property?

First step: access your DNS zone (at your registrar or host). Add a TXT record provided by Search Console with a unique value generated for your domain. This verification proves that you control the root domain.

Next, create the property in Search Console by selecting the 'Domain Property' option (and not 'URL Prefix'). Once validated, wait 24 to 48 hours for Google to consolidate historical data. Reports will gradually display all protocol variants and subdomains.

What errors should you avoid during the setup?

Common mistake: configuring a domain property without maintaining existing URL properties alongside it. You then lose the ability to diagnose certain protocol-specific anomalies finely. Keep at least one URL property for your main HTTPS version.

Another trap: neglecting the access rules. A domain property shares permissions with all users who verified the domain via DNS. If multiple teams manage different subdomains, this can create governance conflicts. Clearly document who has access to what.

How can you verify that the consolidation is working properly?

Compare the organic traffic data between your old main URL property and the new domain property. The figures should be consistent, with possibly a slight increase due to included subdomains.

Also, monitor the index coverage reports. If indexed pages suddenly disappear or if 404 errors appear in bulk, this is a sign of a consolidation issue or poorly configured redirects. Cross-reference with server logs to confirm.

  • Check your DNS access before starting the setup
  • Create the domain property alongside existing URL properties, do not immediately replace them
  • Document the structure of your active subdomains and protocols to anticipate segmentation needs
  • Compare data over 30 days between the old and new properties to detect inconsistencies
  • Monitor 404 error reports and index coverage during the first 60 days
  • Keep access to classic URL properties for at least 6 months for granular analyses if needed
The domain property simplifies multi-protocol management but requires a methodical transition. Do not delete your old properties before validating the consistency of consolidated data. This migration may seem simple on the surface, but it touches on technical aspects — DNS, redirects, subdomain architecture — that often require specialized support. If you manage multiple sites or a complex infrastructure, enlisting an experienced SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and ensure a transition without loss of visibility.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Peut-on utiliser une propriété de domaine sans supprimer les propriétés URL existantes ?
Oui, c'est même recommandé. Les propriétés URL classiques et la propriété de domaine coexistent sans problème. Conservez les deux pour bénéficier à la fois de la vue consolidée et de la granularité par protocole.
La vérification DNS est-elle obligatoire pour une propriété de domaine ?
Absolument. Contrairement aux propriétés URL classiques, une propriété de domaine exige un enregistrement TXT dans la zone DNS. Impossible de contourner cette étape avec une balise meta ou Google Analytics.
Les données historiques sont-elles rétroactives après la création d'une propriété de domaine ?
Oui, Google remonte généralement jusqu'à 16 mois de données disponibles dans Search Console. Mais la consolidation complète peut prendre 24 à 48 heures après la validation DNS.
Comment isoler les performances d'un sous-domaine spécifique dans une propriété de domaine ?
La propriété de domaine ne permet pas de filtrer finement par sous-domaine dans tous les rapports. Pour une analyse granulaire, maintenez une propriété URL dédiée au sous-domaine en question.
Que se passe-t-il si je supprime l'enregistrement DNS de vérification après validation ?
Google vérifie périodiquement la présence de l'enregistrement TXT. Si vous le supprimez, vous perdrez l'accès à la propriété de domaine après un délai variable (généralement quelques semaines). Ne supprimez jamais cet enregistrement.
🏷 Related Topics
HTTPS & Security AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name Search Console

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