Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 4:45 Faut-il vraiment faire une redirection 301 vers l'ancien domaine pour récupérer son indexation ?
- 8:46 AdWords améliore-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
- 10:10 Faut-il ignorer le score PageSpeed Insights pour le SEO ?
- 11:19 Faut-il rediriger vos anciennes versions de CSS et JS pour Googlebot ?
- 13:05 Comment éviter que Google remplace votre sitelink search box par une simple requête site: ?
- 20:08 Faut-il vraiment dupliquer tout le contenu desktop sur mobile pour bien ranker ?
- 29:44 Comment Google choisit-il vraiment quelle URL indexer quand plusieurs versions d'une même page existent ?
- 32:44 Faut-il vraiment mettre nofollow sur tous les liens issus d'espaces membres payants ?
- 47:31 Le duplicate content est-il vraiment un problème pour votre référencement ?
Google automatically transfers signals between the old and new domain during a migration, including negative signals if the content is merely duplicated. To start fresh, you would need to create a site that is different enough to be considered new. This approach raises a strategic question: should you migrate cleanly or redesign to escape a negative history?
What you need to understand
What does Google actually detect during a domain migration?
When migrating a domain, Google analyzes the content similarity between the old and new site. The algorithm compares pages, structure, and text to determine if it is merely a copy or a genuine new project.
If detection concludes that the content is almost identical, 301 redirects are not even necessary for Google to make the connection. The engine then transfers part of the historical signals: authority, ranking positions achieved, but also penalties, algorithmic filters, or a poor quality history.
Why does Google transfer negative signals?
The transfer of negative signals aims to prevent circumventing strategies. Without this mechanism, any penalized site could simply migrate to a new domain to start over while keeping its problematic content intact.
Google considers that if the content remains the same, the reasons leading to the penalty remain valid. The domain change becomes cosmetic, not corrective. This is a defensive logic against abuse, but it also penalizes legitimate migrations of a site with a negative history without the current owner being responsible.
What constitutes a site sufficiently different according to Google?
Google provides no precise threshold, making the recommendation vague. Sufficiently different could mean: new editorial content, new architecture, new semantic targets, or a combination of these factors.
Specifically, if you change 20% of the text, is that enough? 50%? Do you need to revise the URL structure? No one knows. This lack of clear metrics forces you to navigate blindly, with the risk of doing too little or unnecessarily destroying content that was functioning well.
- Google detects content similarity between the old and new domain even without explicit redirects
- Negative signals are transferred if the content is deemed identical, to prevent penalty circumvention
- No numeric criteria exist to define what is a sufficiently different site
- The migration strategy depends on the history of the source domain: clean or problematic
- Starting from scratch also means giving up the positive signals accumulated on the old domain
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, cases of penalty transfer after migration are documented, especially during acquisitions of sites with a toxic history. SEO professionals have observed that even without redirects, a new domain hosting the identical content of a penalized site can inherit the filter within weeks.
However, the recommendation to create different content raises issues. If you had performing and legitimate content, why sacrifice it just to avoid a signal transfer? This logic leads to throwing out the good with the bad, which makes no strategic sense.
What nuances should be added to this logic?
First point: not all sites are penalized. If your old domain had a clean history, migrating identical content with proper 301 redirects is the best practice. You then benefit from transferring authority, ranking positions without risk.
Second nuance: Google talks about signals, not guarantees. The transfer is never 100%, and a well-executed migration can still lose 10-30% of traffic temporarily. Creating different content also does not guarantee a better start, especially if you lose acquired semantic relevance.
[To verify]: Mueller does not specify whether this transfer concerns only manual penalties or also algorithmic filters (Panda, spam updates). The overlap remains unclear, and experiences vary depending on the type of sanction.
In what cases does this recommendation make sense?
It becomes relevant if you purchase a domain with a toxic history: link farm, spam content, unresolved manual penalty. In this scenario, completely redesigning the site can indeed allow for a healthy restart.
Another case: a deep strategic redesign where you change positioning, target, or vertical. Here, creating different content aligns with business logic, not just an anti-penalty tactic. The SEO benefit becomes a positive side effect.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do before a domain migration?
Audit the history of the old domain: Use Search Console to detect manual actions, analyze backlinks to identify toxic profiles, track positions and traffic for potential algorithmic filters. If nothing suspect is found, migrate normally with 301 redirects.
If you detect negative signals, two options: clean up before migrating (disavow toxic links, fix problematic content, request the lifting of manual penalties) or assume a total redesign with new content. The first option is often more cost-effective than starting over.
What mistakes should be avoided during a migration with duplicated content?
Not implementing 301 redirects under the pretext that the content is identical is a mistake. Google transfers signals anyway, but without redirects, you lose control of the process and risk a longer floating period.
Another trap: copying and pasting content onto the new domain before disallowing the old one. You then create a massive temporary duplicate content, with both versions indexed simultaneously. Google has to choose which one to prioritize, and it could go badly.
How do you check that the migration is not transferring negative signals?
Monitor Search Console of the new domain: look for manual actions, index coverage, and changes in impressions and clicks. If a sudden drop occurs after migration without a technical reason, it could potentially be a transfer of an algorithmic filter.
Also analyze positions on key queries: a clean migration might fluctuate a few places, but a generalized drop of 20-30 positions is abnormal. Compare with the history of the old domain to identify if the pattern is repeating.
- Audit the complete history of the old domain (Search Console, backlinks, positions) before any decisions
- Clean up identified negative signals before migration rather than redesigning everything
- Implement 301 redirects even if the content is identical to control the transfer
- Never have both versions indexed simultaneously to avoid massive duplicate content
- Monitor Search Console and positions for 3 months post-migration to detect any abnormal transfers
- Document each step of the migration to be able to revert if necessary
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que les redirections 301 sont obligatoires si Google détecte déjà la similarité ?
Combien de contenu faut-il modifier pour être considéré comme suffisamment différent ?
Les pénalités manuelles sont-elles transférées automatiquement lors d'une migration ?
Peut-on migrer un site pénalisé après avoir nettoyé les problèmes ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google transfère les signaux lors d'une migration ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 11/08/2016
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