Official statement
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Google considers identical content across different TLDs (.fr, .uk, .ca) as potential duplicates. However, significant differences (currency, measurements, local vocabulary) can clear up ambiguity. A small number of TLDs remains manageable without massive penalties, but it requires a clear signaling strategy to avoid geographic targeting conflicts.
What you need to understand
Why does Google consider multiple TLDs as duplicates?
Publishing the same content on multiple top-level domains (TLD) creates an algorithmic dilemma: which one should appear in search results? Unlike internal duplicates where Google can consolidate signals, here it involves distinct domains that fragment authority and create confusion for the geolocation algorithm.
Cutts' statement clarifies that this is not automatic. If the pages show substantial variations (currency symbols, date formats, regional vocabulary), the algorithm may recognize a legitimate local targeting intention rather than a simple replication.
What really differentiates two geo-targeted versions?
Google looks for concrete localization signals: prices in British pounds versus Canadian dollars, references to local events or legislation, geographic availability of products, specific phone numbers and addresses.
A simple currency change in an identical template is not always enough. Differences must permeate the editorial content: mentions of local shipping conditions, culturally adapted references, geo-targeted customer testimonials. The more structurally similar the content is, the harder it is for Google to justify the coexistence of multiple versions in the index.
How many TLDs can we manage without risk?
Cutts mentions that a "small number" remains manageable but does not quantify it. In practical terms, between 2 and 4 TLDs with marked editorial differences, the impact remains limited if the technique is flawless (hreflang, multi-domain Search Console).
Beyond 5-6 TLDs, authority fragmentation becomes noticeable. Backlinks disperse across domains, crawl budget dilutes, and technical maintenance becomes exponentially more complex. Without dedicated resources, it is better to consolidate on 2-3 priority markets.
- Potential duplicate: Google assesses the actual similarity between versions, not just the existence of multiple TLDs
- Substantial differentiation: currency, measurements, local vocabulary, product availability, geo-targeted contacts
- Pragmatic threshold: 2-4 TLDs with adapted content remain manageable; beyond that, complexity explodes
- Signal fragmentation: each TLD dilutes authority, backlinks, and crawl budget without a consolidation strategy
- Mandatory technique: hreflang, domain-specific Search Console, and consistent canonicals are essential to avoid cannibalization
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement reflect on-the-ground reality?
Yes, but with significant gray areas. Multilingual e-commerce sites often observe that Google favors a dominant TLD (often .com) even when the hreflang is flawless. Authority fragmentation is real: a backlink to .fr does not help .uk, unlike a multilingual setup in subfolders where everything strengthens the root domain.
The notion of "sufficient differences" remains intentionally vague [To be verified]. Cutts mentions currency, but how many variations are needed to cross the threshold? A client testing 8 TLDs with 85% identical content saw 5 of them stagnate in secondary indexing for months. The "small number" appears to be 2-3 in practice, not 8.
What are the unspoken limits of this approach?
First point: Geographic TLDs commit Google to country targeting. A .uk will rank better in the UK, but may lose visibility elsewhere even with hreflang. If your UK audience represents 12% of traffic, creating a dedicated TLD can dilute overall performance without proportional gain.
Second blind spot: Technical maintenance. Each TLD requires its own Search Console, sitemap, indexing monitoring, and post-migration redirects. I've seen structures with 6 TLDs where 40% of pages had undetected cross hreflang errors for 18 months. The operational cost often outweighs the SEO benefit.
When does this rule not apply?
Highly regulated markets (pharmacy, finance, gambling) sometimes require distinct legal entities with separate TLDs. Here, duplicity is a side effect of a legal constraint, and Google appears more tolerant when Search Consoles are well configured for explicit geographic targeting.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you're already managing multiple TLDs?
First urgency: audit the real differences. Extract the text content from your pages by TLD and compare them with a similarity tool. If two versions exceed 80% similarity, you're in the red zone. Either enrich one, or redirect to the other with adjusted Search Console targeting.
Next, check your technical localization signals: bidirectional hreflang tags (each version points to all others AND to itself), geographic targeting in Search Console (no "worldwide" on a .uk), canonicals pointing to the local version (not to a global .com). A single broken link invalidates the entire chain.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Classic mistake: deploying 5 TLDs with unrevised automatic translations. Google detects structural similarity even if the words change. A word-for-word translation without cultural adaptation remains duplicate in the eyes of the algorithm. Even worse: some automatic translation tools leave linguistic artifacts that Google identifies as generated duplicates.
Another pitfall: failing to differentiating URLs. If your slugs are identical between .fr and .uk (/produit/chaussures-running), add at least one local variation (/produit/running-shoes-uk). This helps Google understand that it's not just a simple copy. Identical URL patterns increase the suspicion of duplication.
How to check the health of your multi-TLD architecture?
Set up TLD-specific indexing monitoring. If one domain sees its indexing rate drop below 70% while others remain at 95%, it's a signal of detected duplication. Then check positioning queries: if two TLDs are cannibalizing on the same keywords in the same country, targeting geography is failing.
Test your hreflang with a dedicated crawler (not just the Google validator that sees only one page). Cascading hreflang errors (A points to B which does not point back to A) create loops that Google abandons. I've seen a site with 23% of orphan hreflang links discovered after 2 years of production.
- Compare textual similarity between versions (critical threshold: 80%)
- Validate bidirectional hreflang on 100% of pages with a crawler
- Configure geographic targeting in Search Console by domain (never "global" on a ccTLD)
- Differentiating URL slugs between TLDs to reinforce the perception of distinct versions
- Monitor indexing rates by TLD (alert if the gap exceeds 15% between domains)
- Enrich each version with 20-30% unique and geo-targeted editorial content
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que Google pénalise automatiquement les contenus similaires sur différents TLDs ?
Changer uniquement la devise sur une page suffit-il à éviter le duplicate ?
Faut-il utiliser des canonicals entre TLDs différents ?
Les backlinks vers un TLD bénéficient-ils aux autres TLDs du même groupe ?
Peut-on gérer 10 TLDs sans impact négatif si les hreflang sont parfaits ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1 min · published on 26/05/2011
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