Official statement
Other statements from this video 4 ▾
- 1:05 Faut-il vraiment publier quelque chose sur un nouveau domaine avant de migrer ?
- 3:13 Pourquoi faut-il commencer par les sites à faible trafic lors d'une consolidation de domaines ?
- 5:17 Pourquoi Google déconseille-t-il de toucher au design lors d'une migration de domaine ?
- 6:13 Combien de temps faut-il maintenir l'ancien site en ligne après une migration de domaine ?
Google recommends testing 301 redirects on a limited portion of the site before switching the entire domain. This approach allows you to verify that the ranking transfer operates correctly and to identify technical issues before they impact overall traffic. A cautious piece of advice, but it raises practical questions about the testing scope and the necessary observation duration.
What you need to understand
Why does Google stress gradual migration rather than a complete switch?
Migrating a domain remains one of the most risky operations in SEO. A abrupt switch exposes you to traffic losses that are difficult to correct: poorly configured redirects, redirect chains, forgetting strategic pages.
Google suggests to first migrate an isolated section of the site with permanent 301s, then monitor the behavior before generalizing. This method minimizes damage if an issue arises. The risk: losing 30% of traffic on the entire site instead of 30% on just 10% of the site.
What qualifies as a "small part" of the site according to Google?
The statement remains deliberately vague. This could be interpreted as an isolated content category, a subdomain, or 5-10% of the total URLs. The goal is to create a representative sample that allows measuring the impact without risking everything.
In practice, choose a section with a stable and measured search volume, not your most strategic pages. A secondary blog section or a less critical product category will work. Avoid testing on your homepage or main landing pages.
How long should you observe before finalizing the complete migration?
Google does not provide a precise timeline, which complicates planning. Field observations suggest a minimum of 2 to 4 weeks to see if positions stabilize and if organic traffic is maintained.
Monitoring just the positions is not enough. You need to cross-reference with actual traffic, crawl rate, and any errors in Search Console. If the crawl rate drops sharply after the test migration, this is an alarm bell before proceeding.
- Test on 5-10% of the site or an isolated category before any global switch
- Monitor for a minimum of 2-4 weeks the behavior of traffic and positions
- Check the configuration of 301s: no chains, correct HTTP codes, exhaustive coverage
- Monitor the crawl rate and Search Console errors on the migrated section
- Prepare a rollback plan if the test reveals critical issues
SEO Expert opinion
Is this gradual approach really applicable to complex sites?
On paper, this is an excellent practice. In reality, many sites cannot easily isolate a section without creating architecture issues. If your internal linking is dense and your categories are interconnected, migrating 10% of the site creates partial redirects that break the UX.
Google's advice mainly applies to sites with a clear modular structure: multi-section blogs, e-commerce with independent categories, multilingual sites where you can test a language. For a monolithic site with a strong internal linking, this method becomes counterproductive.
What is a realistic observation duration before concluding?
Google remains vague, and this is a problem. Two weeks may suffice to detect flagrant technical errors, but not to measure the true SEO impact. Position fluctuations can take 4 to 6 weeks before fully stabilizing.
If you're in a volatile sector or have seasonal peaks, wait at least for a complete traffic cycle. Testing during a low period and then migrating during peak season is a classic mistake. [To verify]: Google does not specify whether PageRank transfer via 301 is immediate or gradual during this test phase.
What to do if the test reveals a drop in positions?
Let's be honest: if you lose 20-30% of traffic on the tested section, immediately canceling is not always an option. 301s are supposed to be permanent, and rolling back sends contradictory signals to Google.
The key question: distinguish between a temporary fluctuation and a structural problem. If the migrated pages disappear from the index or 4xx errors spike in Search Console, that's a real problem. If positions drop a few ranks and then stabilize, it's likely within the normal tolerance margin of a migration.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to concretely choose the portion of the site to migrate first?
Don't proceed randomly. Select a section with a stable traffic history over at least 6 months, without excessive dependence on strategic pages. An ancillary blog category, a secondary product section, or a non-critical subdomain will work.
Avoid testing on your top 10 revenue-generating pages or those that contribute the most to revenue. The idea is to limit financial risk while obtaining a representative sample. Also ensure that the test section includes different types of pages: category pages, product sheets, editorial content.
What tools to use to track the impact during the test phase?
Google Search Console remains your main ally: track the coverage rate, crawl errors, and organic impressions on the migrated URLs. Compare before/after over a rolling 28-day period to smooth out variations.
On the analytics side, create dedicated segments to isolate traffic from the migrated section. Monitor the bounce rate and session time: a sharp drop may indicate a user experience issue related to redirects. A position monitoring tool (SEMrush, Ahrefs) helps track ranking variations in real-time.
When should you trigger the complete migration?
If after 3-4 weeks, the organic traffic of the test section remains stable or grows, and Search Console does not raise any critical errors, you can consider proceeding. Make sure that the crawl rate has not dropped more than 15-20% during this period.
Prepare a migration plan in waves: do not switch the remaining 90% all at once. Proceed in segments of 25-30% every 2 weeks, keeping the most strategic pages for last. This gives you flexibility if a problem arises mid-process.
- Identify a representative section of 5-10% of the site with stable traffic
- Configure the 301s and check for the absence of redirect chains
- Monitor Search Console, Analytics, and positions for at least 3-4 weeks
- Compare metrics before/after over a rolling 28-day period
- Confirm the absence of critical errors before moving to the next wave
- Plan the complete migration in progressive segments of 25-30%
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on migrer un domaine en une seule fois sans phase de test ?
Combien de temps dure en moyenne une migration de domaine complète ?
Les redirections 301 transfèrent-elles 100% du PageRank vers le nouveau domaine ?
Faut-il garder l'ancien domaine actif après la migration ?
Que faire si le trafic chute malgré les précautions pendant le test ?
🎥 From the same video 4
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 6 min · published on 05/08/2011
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