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Official statement

Everything in the URL can be manipulated by the site owner, so Google probably doesn't give as much weight to keywords in the domain as people think for ranking purposes.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 20/07/2023 ✂ 15 statements
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Other statements from this video 14
  1. Les ccTLD donnent-ils vraiment un avantage géographique en SEO ?
  2. Le choix du TLD a-t-il un impact sur le référencement naturel ?
  3. Faut-il vraiment éviter les TLD bon marché pour son référencement ?
  4. Pourquoi Google traite-t-il certains ccTLD comme des domaines génériques ?
  5. Les domaines .edu et .gov offrent-ils vraiment un avantage SEO ?
  6. Le choix du nom de domaine (TLD) a-t-il vraiment un impact sur le référencement ?
  7. Un TLD en .coffee ou .tech booste-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
  8. Faut-il systématiquement vérifier l'historique d'un domaine avant de l'acheter ?
  9. Pourquoi ne peut-on détecter les actions manuelles qu'après avoir acheté un domaine expiré ?
  10. Les tirets dans les noms de domaine pénalisent-ils vraiment le SEO ?
  11. Faut-il privilégier le branding aux mots-clés exacts dans le nom de domaine ?
  12. WWW ou non-WWW : votre choix de sous-domaine impacte-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
  13. Faut-il abandonner le sous-domaine m. pour mobile ?
  14. Faut-il vraiment éviter les pages 'Coming Soon' sur un nouveau domaine ?
📅
Official statement from (2 years ago)
TL;DR

Google likely doesn't give much weight to keywords in the domain name for ranking purposes, since these elements can be easily manipulated by the site owner. John Mueller makes it clear: anything in the URL is controllable, so Google doesn't trust it as much as people think.

What you need to understand

For years, buying a domain containing a strategic keyword was considered an easy SEO boost. A site about running shoes was called running-shoes.com, and that was almost enough to position it in the top results.

Mueller's statement clarifies what was already office gossip: those days are over. Google has been gradually reducing the weight of Exact Match Domains (EMDs) for years.

Why doesn't Google trust keywords in the domain anymore?

The reason is straightforward — these elements are easily manipulable. Anyone can buy a domain stuffed with keywords without having any quality content behind it. Google had to drastically reduce the weight given to this signal.

Historically, EMDs were over-optimized by spammers who created dozens of sites with ultra-precise domains to rank without effort. Google responded with algorithmic updates specifically targeting this type of practice.

Does this mean a domain with keywords is useless?

Not exactly. A keyword-rich domain can have an indirect positive effect: it improves click-through rate (CTR) in search results, strengthens brand recall, and can facilitate thematic targeting in users' minds.

But for pure algorithmic ranking, its impact is marginal. Google looks first at content, backlinks, site authority, user experience — not whether your domain contains "plumber" or "lawyer".

  • Keywords in the domain have little direct weight on ranking
  • Google distrusts any signal easily manipulable by the site owner
  • A keyword-rich domain can improve CTR and recall, but not algorithmic ranking
  • The real SEO levers remain content, backlinks, and overall site authority

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, completely. For several years now, we've observed that sites with branded domains (like Airbnb, Uber, etc.) crush exact match domains in SERPs. Exact match domains are no longer enough to compensate for a lack of content or backlinks.

That said — and this is where it gets complicated — there are still niches where EMDs perform well. Often in competitive local sectors, a domain like plumber-paris-15.com can still hold its own. But be careful: this is probably not because of the domain itself, but because these sites have also optimized their Google Business Profile, local content, etc.

In what cases doesn't this rule fully apply?

There's an important nuance regarding branded domains. If your brand IS the keyword (for example, a site actually called "Direct Auto Insurance"), then having these words in the domain isn't manipulative — it's legitimate.

Google probably makes a distinction between an opportunistic EMD (purchased solely for SEO) and a domain that reflects genuine brand identity. [To be verified] — Google has never explicitly stated the precise criteria for this distinction, but field observations suggest that an older domain with real activity and brand signals (branded searches, citations, natural backlinks) will be treated better than a freshly created EMD.

Should you completely avoid EMDs?

No. If you're launching a new project and the exact match domain is available, there's nothing wrong with taking it — as long as you don't rely on it for ranking. Use it as a marketing asset (recall, CTR) rather than an SEO lever.

Warning: Whatever you do, don't rename an existing site with authority to adopt an EMD. You risk losing far more in brand signals and backlinks than you'd gain (which is probably zero).

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do if you already have an EMD?

If your site is already built on an exact match domain, don't change anything for now. A domain change is a risky operation that can destroy years of SEO work if mishandled.

Instead, focus on the real levers: improving content quality, strengthening your backlink profile, optimizing user experience. If your EMD is still performing, it's because of these factors — not the domain itself.

What mistakes should you avoid when choosing a new domain?

Don't fall into the opposite trap: choosing an incomprehensible or overly generic domain just to avoid EMDs. The ideal is still a domain that's short, memorable, and aligned with your brand.

Also avoid domains stuffed with hyphens (plumber-paris-15-cheap.com), which smell like spam from a mile away and hurt credibility. Google tolerates them, but users avoid them.

  • Don't migrate an existing site to an EMD just for SEO — it's not worth the effort
  • For a new project, prioritize a short, memorable branded domain
  • If you have an EMD, invest in content and backlinks rather than counting on the domain
  • Avoid multi-hyphenated domains that hurt credibility
  • Build strong brand signals: branded searches, citations, social media presence

The key takeaway: a good domain facilitates recall and can improve CTR, but it will never replace a solid SEO strategy. Focus your efforts on the ranking factors that actually matter — content, backlinks, authority.

These optimizations can require deep expertise and considerable time. If you're looking to maximize performance without stretching your resources too thin, working with a specialized SEO agency can help you structure a coherent strategy and avoid costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un domaine avec mot-clé améliore-t-il au moins le taux de clic dans les résultats ?
Oui, dans certains cas. Un domaine explicite peut rassurer l'utilisateur sur la pertinence du site, surtout dans des recherches très spécifiques. Mais cet effet est marginal et ne compense pas un titre ou une meta description mal optimisés.
Si je change mon EMD pour un domaine de marque, est-ce que je perds mon positionnement ?
Pas nécessairement, mais c'est risqué. Une migration de domaine bien gérée (redirections 301, Search Console, etc.) peut préserver vos positions. Mais si votre EMD était le seul atout de votre site, vous risquez de perdre du terrain.
Les sous-domaines avec mots-clés sont-ils traités différemment ?
Google applique probablement la même logique. Un sous-domaine bourré de mots-clés ne vous donnera pas d'avantage algorithmique significatif. La structure compte moins que le contenu et l'autorité globale du domaine principal.
Est-ce que Google pénalise activement les EMD ?
Non, il n'y a pas de pénalité directe. Google réduit simplement le poids de ce signal. Un EMD bien optimisé avec du contenu de qualité peut toujours ranker — mais pas grâce au domaine.
Les extensions de domaine (.fr, .com, .io) ont-elles un impact SEO ?
L'extension elle-même n'a pas d'impact direct sur le classement. Cependant, un .fr peut envoyer un signal géographique qui aide pour le SEO local, et certaines extensions exotiques (.xyz, .club) peuvent souffrir d'une perception de faible crédibilité.
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