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Official statement

Having keywords in the domain name does not guarantee better rankings. You need to work on SEO just like any other site to gain visibility.
21:59
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 27/07/2018 ✂ 33 statements
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📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that having keywords in your domain name does not guarantee any automatic ranking advantage. An EMD (Exact Match Domain) should be treated with the same SEO rigor as a branded domain. The days when purchasing 'plumber-paris.fr' was enough to rank a site are long gone.

What you need to understand

Is the domain name still a ranking factor?

John Mueller is clear: the presence of keywords in the domain does not provide any algorithmic boost. EMDs (Exact Match Domains) like 'cheap-car-insurance.com' do not receive any preferential treatment in Google's algorithm.

This clarification puts an end to a persistent belief from the 2000s-2010s, where exact match domains dominated the SERPs. Google has gradually devalued this signal, especially with the EMD Update of 2012 that targeted low-quality domains boosted solely by their name.

Why is Google clarifying this now?

SEOs continue to encounter clients convinced that buying 'divorce-lawyer-lyon.fr' will guarantee them a first-page ranking. This misconception persists despite years of algorithm evolution. Mueller addresses a recurring question in forums and SEO audits.

The reminder is clear: no technical shortcut replaces substantial work. Content, backlinks, UX, authority... the fundamentals remain the same whether you're called 'nike.com' or 'cheap-running-shoes.fr'.

How does Google really evaluate domains?

The algorithm analyzes the overall relevance of the site, not just its URL. Dominant signals include content quality, authority measured by backlinks, user experience, freshness of information, and thematic coherence.

A strong branded domain can outperform an EMD on its own query if the rest of the SEO equation swings in its favor. Google prioritizes entity, reputation, and E-E-A-T over raw lexical matching.

  • No algorithmic bonus for keywords in the domain
  • The EMD Update devalued low-quality domains since 2012
  • Classic ranking factors (content, backlinks, UX) apply equally
  • Google favors the entity and overall thematic authority
  • A well-crafted branded domain will outperform a weak EMD across the board

SEO Expert opinion

Does this declaration match real-world observations?

Absolutely. Recent audits show that successful EMDs all have a solid backlink profile, expert content, and a genuine editorial strategy. Those who stagnate on pages 3-4 despite their 'perfect' name consistently lack these fundamentals.

The few EMDs that still dominate their niches (often very specific local or B2B markets) owe their success to their age, link profile, and authority built over years. It is never just about their URL. The perceived advantage often stems from survivor bias: we see the successful EMDs, not the thousands that languish.

What risks do EMDs still carry?

A domain packed with keywords could trigger a potential spam signal, especially if it's new and accompanied by mediocre content. Google has refined its filters to detect the patterns of 'optimized domain + weak content + artificial link profile'.

From a UX perspective, a name like 'low-rate-mortgage-broker.fr' harms memorability and word-of-mouth. Users rarely type long URLs, preferring to go through Google... where the domain does not offer any advantages. The vicious circle is complete.

In what cases does an EMD still hold relative value?

The psychological matching still works for certain users: seeing 'plumber-marseille.fr' in the results can enhance clicks if the intent is local and transactional. However, this effect relates to CTR, not algorithmic ranking. Google does not rank the site better; it may just benefit from a higher click-through rate.

For a short-term brandless project (affiliation, MFA, market testing), an EMD may ease immediate understanding. But once aiming for sustainability, authority, or differentiation, a branded name remains superior. The classic compromise: a keyword + unique modifier ('Qonto', 'Payfit', 'Comet').

Note: If you're considering migrating from an EMD to a branded domain, carefully plan 301 redirects and anticipate a transition period where authority is rebuilt. Domain migration remains one of the riskiest SEO projects.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do if you already own an EMD?

Don't panic. Keeping an existing EMD is not a handicap if the rest of your SEO strategy is solid. Focus on the real levers: producing expert content, acquiring quality backlinks, technical optimization, and improving UX.

If your domain has been around for years and has a clean backlink history, migrating to a branded domain presents more risks than benefits. SEO inertia works in your favor. Instead, invest in strengthening your brand through content marketing and digital PR.

How to choose a domain name for a new project?

Opt for a memorable branded name that allows room for pivoting or expanding your offering. 'Plumber-paris-15.fr' geographically and thematically boxes you in. 'Aquatech.fr' enables you to evolve to other services or areas without friction.

Check the availability of the name on social media, the absence of conflicting trademarks, and phonetic clarity. A good test: if you need to spell out the domain over the phone detailing each hyphen, it's a bad choice. Keep it short, pronounceable, and unambiguous.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Do not sacrifice brand consistency to insert a keyword into the domain. A name like 'seo-expert-consultant-paris.com' looks spammy, harms credibility, and provides no algorithmic gain. Google reads your content, title tags, anchors… the domain URL carries no weight in the equation.

Avoid exotic TLDs (.xyz, .top, .online) just to grab a keyword in a .com that’s already taken. Users trust these extensions less and Google statistically associates them with more spam. A clean .fr or .com with a branded name outranks a keyword-stuffed .xyz.

  • Do not change domains solely to remove keywords if your EMD has a history
  • For a new project, choose a short and memorable branded name
  • Check availability on social media and absence of trademark conflicts
  • Test phone pronunciation: if you need to spell it, it's too complex
  • Avoid exotic TLDs and long names packed with hyphens
  • Invest in content, backlinks, and UX rather than domain optimization
The domain name is just a wrapper. What matters is what you put inside: expert content, a coherent editorial strategy, quality backlink acquisition, and precise technical optimization. These projects are time-consuming and require multi-dimensional expertise. If you lack internal resources or want to speed up your authority growth, partnering with a specialized SEO agency can save you months of trial and error and secure your investment from the start.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un EMD peut-il pénaliser mon site dans les résultats Google ?
Non, pas directement. Mais un EMD récent associé à du contenu faible et des backlinks artificiels déclenchera les mêmes filtres anti-spam qu'un domaine brandé dans la même situation. Le nom lui-même ne pénalise pas, c'est le profil global qui compte.
Dois-je migrer mon EMD vers un domaine brandé pour améliorer mon SEO ?
Seulement si vous avez une stratégie de marque à long terme et que votre EMD actuel nuit à votre crédibilité. Une migration de domaine comporte des risques (perte temporaire de trafic, dilution de l'autorité) et ne booste pas le ranking par magie. Analysez le ratio risque/bénéfice avec un expert.
Les sous-domaines ou sous-dossiers avec mots-clés ont-ils plus de poids ?
Non. Google traite les URL comme des identifiants, pas comme du contenu en soi. Un sous-dossier /assurance-auto/ ne rank pas mieux qu'un /produits/auto/ si le contenu et les signaux de pertinence sont identiques. Concentrez-vous sur les balises title, H1 et le contenu réel.
Un concurrent avec EMD me bat systématiquement, pourquoi ?
Parce qu'il a probablement un meilleur profil de backlinks, du contenu plus pertinent, une meilleure UX ou une autorité de domaine supérieure. Son nom de domaine ne lui donne aucun avantage algorithmique. Auditez ses vraies forces SEO au lieu de blâmer son URL.
Le choix du TLD (.fr, .com, .net) influence-t-il le ranking ?
Pour le SEO local, un .fr peut renforcer le signal géographique, mais Google utilise surtout la géolocalisation serveur, Google My Business et les signaux de contenu. Pour le ranking global, .com et .fr sont équivalents. Évitez les TLD exotiques souvent associés au spam.
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