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Official statement

Google handles 301 and 302 redirects based on their nature. A 301 is considered permanent, while a 302 is viewed as temporary. However, Google may interpret a 302 as a 301 if behavior suggests that the redirect is permanent. Both types of redirects pass PageRank, but the URL displayed in search results may differ based on the nature of the redirect.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h13 💬 EN 📅 16/10/2015 ✂ 21 statements
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Other statements from this video 20
  1. 0:32 Faut-il vraiment désavouer les liens de l'ancien domaine après une migration ?
  2. 3:36 L'Autorité de Domaine (DA) est-elle vraiment inutile pour le référencement Google ?
  3. 6:45 Pourquoi un excès de redirections 301 peut-il tuer votre crawl budget ?
  4. 7:15 Google traite-t-il vraiment toutes vos redirections comme vous le pensez ?
  5. 14:00 Google Analytics influence-t-il vraiment le classement de vos pages ?
  6. 15:07 Combien de temps Google met-il vraiment à intégrer une refonte de structure de site ?
  7. 15:09 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les changements de structure de site ?
  8. 17:48 Un temps de réponse serveur lent ruine-t-il vraiment votre crawl budget ?
  9. 31:57 Les erreurs 500 tuent-elles vraiment votre crawl budget et votre indexation ?
  10. 37:11 Les redirections 302 tuent-elles vraiment votre PageRank ?
  11. 38:26 L'outil de suppression d'URL de la Search Console retire-t-il vraiment vos pages de l'index Google ?
  12. 38:49 Faut-il vraiment utiliser noindex plutôt que robots.txt pour gérer les pages de faible valeur ?
  13. 41:07 Les redirections 301 font-elles perdre du PageRank lors du passage en HTTPS ?
  14. 42:29 Comment les signaux internes de votre site influencent-ils vraiment le crawl et le ranking Google ?
  15. 44:54 Google peut-il vraiment crawler tous vos contenus JavaScript ?
  16. 45:00 Faut-il encore se préoccuper du schéma d'exploration AJAX pour le référencement ?
  17. 46:58 Faut-il vraiment rediriger toutes vos pages produits en rupture de stock ?
  18. 50:55 Panda et Penguin pèsent-ils encore vraiment dans le classement de vos pages ?
  19. 73:47 Le passage HTTPS fait-il vraiment perdre du PageRank en SEO ?
  20. 74:06 Les données structurées suffisent-elles pour intégrer le Knowledge Graph de Google ?
📅
Official statement from (10 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to treat 301 redirects as permanent and 302 redirects as temporary, but acknowledges that a 302 can be interpreted as a 301 if its behavior suggests permanence. Both types pass PageRank equally, contrary to what many still believe. However, the URL displayed in the SERPs may vary depending on the type of redirect chosen, directly impacting the visibility of your target pages.

What you need to understand

Does Google really make a technical distinction between 301 and 302?

The theory is simple: a 301 signals a permanent redirect, while a 302 indicates a temporary move. In practice, Google analyzes the actual behavior of the redirect rather than blindly sticking to the returned HTTP code.

Practically? If you keep a 302 active for months, Google will eventually treat it as a 301. The engine observes the duration, the stability of the redirect pattern, and contextual signals to determine the real intention. A 302 that lingers for six months will be interpreted as permanent, regardless of what your server says.

Is PageRank really passed the same way?

For years, the dominant SEO belief claimed that a 302 diluted or blocked PageRank. Google debunks this idea: both types of redirects pass page authority equally.

This change is not new, but many SEOs continue to apply outdated rules. The transmission of PageRank should no longer be a criterion for choosing between 301 and 302. What matters is the URL you want to see appear in the results.

Which URL does Google display in the SERPs depending on the type of redirect?

The real issue lies here. With a 301, Google consistently prioritizes the destination URL in its indexes and search results. The old URL gradually disappears from the SERPs.

With a 302, Google may choose to retain the source URL in the results if the context suggests that the redirect is indeed temporary. But if behavior indicates permanence, it will switch to the target URL as it would for a 301. This ambiguity creates unpredictable situations when a 302 remains in place too long.

  • Both 301 and 302 pass PageRank identically, contrary to older SEO recommendations
  • Google interprets a 302 as a 301 if the behavior suggests permanence (duration, stability)
  • The URL displayed in the SERPs differs: a 301 forces the display of the destination, while a 302 may retain the source URL
  • The choice between 301 and 302 should be based on the real intention (temporary vs. permanent) and not on myths of authority transmission
  • A poorly used 302 creates uncertainty about the canonical URL displayed by Google

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with what we observe in practice?

Yes, overall. Tests conducted on site migrations show that 302s indeed pass PageRank for several years now. The positions of pages redirected via 302 are maintained, and authority passes to the destination.

The problem? Confusion persists among many practitioners who still apply rules from 2010. Some SEO tools continue to alert on 302s as if they were systematically problematic. The real risk is not loss of PageRank, but uncertainty in indexing.

What gray areas remain in this explanation?

Google remains deliberately vague about the exact timeframe after which a 302 transitions into 301 treatment. "If behavior suggests" provides no actionable benchmark. Two weeks? Three months? Six months? [To be verified] because Google provides no numerical data.

Another unclear point: how does Google determine "the nature" of a redirect beyond the HTTP code? The contextual signals mentioned are not detailed. Does it involve the presence of backlinks to the old URL? Residual organic traffic? Crawl patterns? This opacity complicates decision-making for progressive migrations or A/B URL tests.

In what situations does this rule pose a problem?

Sites that use temporary redirects for SEO tests find themselves in a gray area. If your 302 lasts too long, Google will shift indexing to the new URL when you actually wanted to keep the old one in the SERPs.

Concrete case: you are testing a new URL structure for a month with 302s. Google may decide, after three weeks, that it is permanent and start indexing the new URLs. Result: you lose control over the timing of your test. The recommendation remains clear: 301 for permanent, 302 only if you are sure to revert to the source URL quickly.

Note: Redirect chains (302 → 301 → final page) create unpredictable behaviors. Google may interpret each link differently, which generates indexing inconsistencies. Always prefer direct redirects.

Practical impact and recommendations

What redirect should you concretely choose for each use case?

For a permanent content migration, always use a 301. Site redesign, domain name change, merging pages: the 301 ensures that Google will index the destination URL and consolidate authority quickly.

Reserve the 302 for truly temporary situations: short maintenance, A/B testing for a few days, seasonal content that will revert to its original URL. If you are uncertain about the duration, opt for a 301. A 302 that drags on creates more problems than it solves.

How to audit existing redirects on your site?

Start by identifying all 302s active for more than 30 days. Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or an equivalent tool, filter by 302 status code, and cross-check with implementation dates if you track them.

For each persistent 302, ask yourself: is this redirect still temporary? If the answer is no, or if you can no longer remember why it is a 302, convert it to a 301 immediately. Then check in Search Console which URL Google displays in the results for these redirected pages. If it is the old one when you wanted to promote the new one, you have a consistency problem.

What critical mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Never create redirect chains mixing 301 and 302. Google may interpret each step differently, leading to unpredictable indexing inconsistencies. A page A in 302 pointing to B, which itself is in 301 pointing to C, creates semantic chaos for the engine.

Also avoid using 302s "just in case" thinking you'll switch to 301 later. This approach dilutes your strategy and extends consolidation timelines. Decide from the start whether it is permanent or not, and stick to that choice with the appropriate HTTP code.

  • Use a 301 for any permanent migration, without exception
  • Reserve 302 for temporary situations lasting no longer than 2-3 weeks
  • Monthly audit active 302s to identify those that should be 301s
  • Check in Search Console which URL Google indexes for your redirects
  • Eliminate all redirect chains, regardless of their nature
  • Document the reason and date for each temporary redirect for clear tracking
Effective redirect management requires ongoing monitoring and a precise understanding of the signals sent to Google. Between the gray areas of the official documentation, variable interpretation timelines, and the impacts on indexing, an HTTP code error can cost weeks of visibility. For critical sites or complex migrations, the support of a specialized SEO agency helps avoid these pitfalls and optimize every step of the redirect process with proven protocols.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une 302 fait-elle vraiment perdre du PageRank par rapport à une 301 ?
Non. Google a confirmé que les deux types de redirections transmettent le PageRank de manière équivalente. Cette croyance SEO est obsolète depuis plusieurs années, même si de nombreux praticiens l'appliquent encore.
Au bout de combien de temps Google considère-t-il une 302 comme permanente ?
Google ne donne aucun délai précis. L'interprétation dépend du comportement observé : durée, stabilité, contexte. En pratique, une 302 active plusieurs mois sera traitée comme une 301, mais le seuil exact reste flou.
Quelle URL apparaît dans les résultats de recherche avec une 302 ?
Google peut afficher soit l'URL source, soit l'URL de destination selon son interprétation du caractère temporaire de la redirection. Avec une 301, c'est systématiquement l'URL de destination qui s'affiche.
Peut-on utiliser une 302 pour tester une nouvelle URL avant de passer en 301 ?
Techniquement oui, mais c'est risqué. Si le test dure trop longtemps, Google peut interpréter la 302 comme permanente et indexer la nouvelle URL, vous faisant perdre le contrôle du timing. Mieux vaut décider rapidement et basculer en 301 si le test est concluant.
Faut-il corriger toutes les 302 anciennes en 301 sur un site existant ?
Oui, si ces 302 ne sont plus temporaires ou si leur raison d'être a disparu. Auditez régulièrement vos redirections et basculez en 301 toutes celles qui persistent au-delà de leur justification initiale pour clarifier les signaux envoyés à Google.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Redirects

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