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Official statement

Google can impose a penalty on a specific subdomain or the entire domain, depending on the location of the link issue. The penalty can automatically disappear after a certain time.
3:47
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h14 💬 EN 📅 26/09/2014 ✂ 14 statements
Watch on YouTube (3:47) →
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  4. 8:09 Google récompense-t-il vraiment la qualité ou se contente-t-il de pénaliser le mauvais ?
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  8. 24:25 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment pour qu'une migration de site stabilise ses positions Google ?
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📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that a manual penalty can hit an isolated subdomain or contaminate the entire root domain, depending on the extent and location of the detected issue. The sanction can disappear spontaneously after a period, without any manual action from the owner. This statement raises questions about the actual permeability between domains and subdomains in Google's algorithmic evaluation.

What you need to understand

What’s the difference between a subdomain penalty and a global penalty?

When Google detects an artificial link issue on a specific subdomain (blog.example.com), it can decide to sanction only that part of the site. The root domain (example.com) and other subdomains remain unaffected in search results.

The penalty can, however, extend to the entire domain if Google believes that the link spam indicates a systematic strategy by the owner. In this case, all subdomains and the root domain experience a simultaneous drop in visibility. The choice between these two scenarios depends on the human assessment of the Google reviewer examining the case.

What does Google mean by the “expiration” of a penalty?

The statement mentions that a penalty can automatically disappear after a certain timeframe. This means that Google sometimes applies temporary sanctions without requiring a reconsideration request from the owner.

This mechanism remains unclear: no duration is specified, and it is unknown whether Google actually verifies that the problem is resolved or if the lifting is purely chronological. For a practitioner, this creates a zone of uncertainty: should one wait passively or take action to clean up toxic backlinks?

How does Google decide the scope of the sanction?

The main criterion seems to be the geographical concentration of the spam. If artificial links heavily point to a single subdomain while the rest of the site remains clean, Google limits the penalty. If dubious practices affect multiple subdomains or the root domain itself, the sanction broadens.

Google also evaluates the nature of editorial control. A subdomain managed by a third party (e.g., forum.example.com hosted by an external community) can be sanctioned in isolation if the main owner demonstrates that they did not orchestrate the spam. But this tolerance is never guaranteed.

  • Targeted scope: Google can isolate a subdomain if the spam is confined and distinct from the rest
  • Possible contagion: a widespread artificial link strategy results in a penalty on the entire domain
  • Automatic expiration: certain sanctions can lift without owner action, but the conditions remain opaque
  • Human arbitration: the final decision lies with a Google reviewer, not a pure algorithm
  • Uncertain separation: Google often treats domains and subdomains as a single entity, despite this nuance

SEO Expert opinion

Is this distinction between domain and subdomain rigorously applied in practice?

In practice, it appears that Google tends to treat domain and subdomains as a whole when evaluating overall quality. Even though Mueller's statement suggests fine granularity, documented cases often show a rapid contagion of penalties.

For instance, a client with a subdomain dedicated to press releases (pr.example.com) filled with poor links saw their main domain lose 60% visibility within 48 hours, despite a clear technical separation. The theory of targeted sanctions does not always hold against the algorithmic reality.

Is automatic expiration a viable passive waiting strategy?

Relying on a spontaneous lifting of penalty without taking action is a risky approach. No timeframe is guaranteed, and some sites remain penalized for years. Mueller's statement does not clarify whether Google effectively verifies that the problem is resolved or if it’s just a temporal reset.

Field observations suggest that penalties that disappear without action are often tied to global algorithm updates, not to an individual site evaluation. In other words, you may benefit from a collective “forgiveness” during a Core Update, but nothing is predictable. [To be confirmed]: Google has never provided statistics on the rate of automatic lifting vs. reconsideration requests.

In what cases is this rule not applicable at all?

If your domain already has a history of manipulations (previous penalties, recurring link schemes), Google will not apply half-measures. The sanction will affect the entire domain, regardless of where the new issue is located. The benefit of the doubt exists only for “first-time offenders.”

Similarly, if the subdomain in question generates a significant portion of the site’s traffic or revenue, Google considers it an integral part of the overall editorial strategy. It becomes impossible to plead separation. A blog.example.com that captures 80% of visits will never be treated as an autonomous entity.

Warning: never rely on technical architecture (subdomain vs. directory) to escape a penalty. Google evaluates strategic coherence, not URL structure. Link spam remains spam, regardless of its location.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do when a subdomain is affected?

The first step: identify the exact scope of the penalty using Google Search Console. Check whether the manual action concerns only the subdomain or the entire domain. This information can be found in the "Manual Actions" section of GSC.

Next, conduct a comprehensive backlink audit of the penalized subdomain using Ahrefs, Majestic, or Semrush. Isolate the artificial links (PBNs, poor directories, spam comments, obvious link purchases). Create a clean disavow file and submit it via Google’s Disavow Tool. Simultaneously, reach out to webmasters to attempt manual removals of the worst links.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this situation?

Never delete a penalized subdomain hoping it will erase the problem. Google retains the history and may contaminate the new subdomain or extend the sanction to the main domain. This is a reckless move that worsens the situation.

Also, avoid submitting a reconsideration request too quickly, without having thoroughly cleaned up. Google detects cosmetic attempts and often prolongs the penalty in case of recurrence. Take your time to perform a thorough job before requesting the lifting.

How can you verify that your domain/subdomain architecture does not create a vulnerability?

Audit the editorial coherence between the main domain and subdomains. If you host content of significantly different quality on subdomains (e.g., expert content on example.com, low-cost content farm on promo.example.com), Google may interpret this as a manipulation strategy.

Also, check the distribution of backlinks: a massive imbalance (99% of links to the main domain, 1% to the subdomains) is natural. However, if a recent subdomain suddenly accumulates thousands of links while the root domain stagnates, it's a red flag. Google detects these statistical anomalies.

  • Weekly check the Manual Actions section of Google Search Console for ALL your subdomains
  • Keep an updated disavow file for each property (domain + subdomains) in GSC
  • Audit new backlinks every two weeks with a third-party tool to detect negative SEO attacks
  • Document the actual editorial independence of each subdomain (who manages the content, what is the editorial line)
  • Avoid link strategies targeting only one subdomain: this creates a profile of artificially fragmented links
  • Prepare a migration plan to directories (/blog/ instead of blog.example.com) if your subdomains lack a strong technical justification
The granularity of penalties between domain and subdomain remains unpredictable. Treat each subdomain as a distinct property in your monitoring tools, but assume that global contamination is possible. Automatic expiration exists, but never rely on it: clean proactively. These structural and link profile optimizations can quickly become complex to manage alone, especially if you handle multiple subdomains with heterogeneous backlink profiles. Engaging a specialized SEO agency allows for a comprehensive multi-property audit and a coordinated action plan to secure your entire digital ecosystem without risking worsened conditions through inconsistent actions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un sous-domaine pénalisé peut-il contaminer le domaine racine même après nettoyage ?
Oui, si Google considère que le spam révélait une stratégie globale du propriétaire. Le nettoyage d'un sous-domaine ne garantit pas que le domaine principal échappe à une sanction élargie si l'historique est douteux.
Combien de temps dure une pénalité manuelle sur sous-domaine avant expiration automatique ?
Google ne communique aucun délai précis. Les observations montrent des durées très variables, de quelques semaines à plusieurs années. Compter sur l'expiration sans agir est une stratégie hasardeuse.
Vaut-il mieux migrer un sous-domaine pénalisé vers un répertoire pour isoler le problème ?
Non, Google conserve l'historique et peut transférer la pénalité. Mieux vaut nettoyer les backlinks toxiques du sous-domaine existant et déposer une demande de réexamen une fois le travail fait.
Comment savoir si ma pénalité concerne uniquement le sous-domaine ou tout le domaine ?
Consulte la section Actions Manuelles de Google Search Console pour chaque propriété (domaine et sous-domaines). Google indique explicitement le périmètre de la sanction dans la notification.
Un sous-domaine géré par un tiers peut-il entraîner une pénalité sur mon domaine principal ?
Oui, Google considère que le propriétaire du domaine racine est responsable de ce qui se passe sur ses sous-domaines, même si la gestion est déléguée. Il faut surveiller activement l'usage qui en est fait.
🏷 Related Topics
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