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Official statement

Maintaining two old sites active with links to a new central site prevents the new site from gaining visibility as the value is not transferred. Without redirects, the new site struggles to rank and will never surpass the old ones in visibility.
58:54
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h03 💬 EN 📅 29/10/2020 ✂ 25 statements
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  7. 17:16 Is it really necessary to avoid any migration following a failed domain migration?
  8. 20:36 Should you really cancel a failed domain migration or commit to it fully?
  9. 21:40 How does Google really handle the separation of a site into two distinct entities?
  10. 24:10 Does Google really analyze the audio of your podcasts for SEO?
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  21. 47:42 Do 302 redirects really pass on as much PageRank as 301 redirects?
  22. 50:58 Does Google instantly change the canonical URL after removing a redirect?
  23. 53:43 Do 302 redirects really end up being treated as permanent 301s?
  24. 55:45 Can you really migrate multiple sites to a single domain using Google's Change of Address tool?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Keeping multiple old sites active with simple links to a new central domain prevents the latter from capturing their authority. Without 301 redirects, SEO value remains diluted across the old properties. The new site stagnates in search results, trapped behind its predecessors which it can never surpass in visibility.

What you need to understand

What is value dilution across multiple domains?

When a company launches a new central site but keeps its old domains active, it creates a situation of internal competition. Google sees multiple distinct entities that often target the same queries. Each domain retains its own PageRank, history, and backlinks.

The classic mistake: placing links from the old sites to the new one, hoping that’s enough. Spoiler: it’s not. A link passes juice, sure, but it does not transfer the authority accumulated over the years. The new domain starts from zero while the old ones retain their SEO capital.

Why will the new site never surpass the old ones without redirects?

Google still indexes the old pages. They continue to rank, accumulate user signals, and receive backlinks. The new site, on the other hand, must build its reputation from scratch — a process that takes months or even years.

Even with links from the old domains, the new site remains in a follower position. Algorithms favor established pages that have proven their worth. Without consolidation via 301 redirects, you are artificially maintaining a hierarchy where your old sites dominate your new property.

What is the difference between a link and a 301 redirect?

A standard link transmits a fraction of PageRank — let's say 15-25% based on estimates. A 301 redirect, on the other hand, achieves almost total transfer (98-99% based on empirical tests). It tells Google: "This page has moved here. Transfer everything."

The 301 redirect also consolidates historical signals: domain age, backlink profile, behavioral metrics. A link, however, remains a simple recommendation between two distinct entities. It’s the whole difference between merging two bank accounts and just making a transfer.

  • Without 301 redirects: each domain retains its own authority, value remains scattered
  • Links alone only transfer a minimal fraction of accumulated SEO capital
  • The new site starts from zero and must compete with its own established ancestors
  • Google sees multiple competing entities rather than a single consolidated property
  • External backlinks continue to point towards the old domains which capture the traffic

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement really reflect what we observe in the field?

Absolutely. I've seen dozens of migrations where the company retained the old sites "not to lose traffic." The result: traffic stagnates everywhere. The new domain caps at 30-40% of what it could achieve if all authority was consolidated.

The fear of losing traffic during migration is legitimate. But by practicing this halfway measure, you create a permanent shaky balance. The old sites cannibalize the new one, Google doesn't know which version to favor, and your crawl budget scatters across three properties instead of one.

In what cases does this rule have exceptions?

There are situations where maintaining multiple active domains is justified — but they are rare and specific. For example: sites targeting completely distinct geographic markets (France vs Japan), with different product catalogs and no keyword cannibalization.

Another case: completely independent brands with separate audiences. But beware: as soon as you create links between these sites, you signal to Google that they are related. And there, you fall back into the dilution problem described by Mueller. [To be verified]: Google has never specified a quantitative threshold — how many cross-links trigger a penalty or devaluation? We lack hard data.

What are the concrete risks if this advice is ignored?

First risk: the cap on the new site. It will never reach its potential as long as the authority remains dispersed. You invest in content, link building, technical optimizations — but you're rowing with a 60-70% domain authority handicap.

Second risk: cannibalization in the SERPs. Google may display your old sites for queries you want to rank with the new one. You’re fighting against yourself. And if a competitor analyzes your strategy, they see an exploitable structural flaw — you're divided, thus weakened.

Attention: Keeping multiple active domains also multiplies maintenance costs, security attack surfaces, and complicates analytics tracking. You’re managing three sites for the performance of one.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should be done concretely during a domain migration?

The only viable approach: 301 redirect page by page from the old domains to the new one. No shortcuts available. Each URL from the old site must point to its logical equivalent on the new domain. If the equivalent doesn’t exist, redirect to the parent category or the most relevant page.

Plan this migration with a precise mapping: old URL → new URL. Test redirects on staging before deployment. Ensure you don't have redirect chains (A → B → C) that dilute the juice and slow down crawling. A direct redirect is key.

What mistakes should be avoided during consolidation?

Mistake #1: redirecting all pages to the new site’s homepage. Google detects these disguised soft 404s and may ignore the redirects. Each page must have a thematically relevant destination.

Mistake #2: keeping the old sites active "for a few months to see." No. As soon as redirects are in place, deindex the old domains via Search Console and robots.txt. Otherwise, Google continues to crawl and index the old versions — you remain in a duplicate content situation across domains.

How to check if consolidation is working?

Monitor in Google Search Console the evolution of the number of indexed pages on each property. The old domains should gradually fall towards zero while the new one rises. Also follow impressions and clicks: traffic should migrate from one site to another over 4 to 12 weeks.

Analyze your positions with rank tracking tools. If the new site isn’t gaining traction after 8 weeks, there’s an issue — misconfigured redirects, redirect chains, or old content still indexed causing cannibalization. Fix immediately.

  • Establish a complete mapping old site → new site (URL by URL)
  • Deploy 301 redirects without intermediate chains
  • Deindex old domains as soon as redirects are active
  • Submit the new XML sitemap via Search Console
  • Monitor the evolution of indexing over a minimum of 12 weeks
  • Update major backlinks to point to the new domain when possible
Merging multiple sites into a central domain requires rigorous technical consolidation via 301 redirects. Links alone are never enough. This operation demands careful planning, exhaustive mapping, and analytics tracking over several months. The stakes are considerable: a failed migration can lead to a loss of 50-70% of organic traffic for years. If your current structure involves multiple domains and you're considering consolidation, partnering with a specialized SEO agency can secure the operation — these professionals know the technical pitfalls and have proven methodologies to minimize losses and accelerate authority transfer.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il garder les redirections 301 actives après une migration ?
Idéalement de façon permanente. Google recommande au minimum 1 an, mais les backlinks externes peuvent pointer vers les anciennes URLs pendant des années. Maintenir les redirections indéfiniment garantit que vous ne perdez aucun jus SEO.
Peut-on transférer l'autorité avec une redirection 302 au lieu d'une 301 ?
Non. La redirection 302 est temporaire et ne transfère pas l'autorité de façon durable. Google l'interprète comme une situation provisoire et continue d'indexer l'ancienne URL. Seule la 301 consolide le capital SEO.
Que faire des anciens domaines une fois les redirections en place ?
Conservez-les pour éviter qu'un concurrent ou un squatter ne les récupère. Maintenez le renouvellement du nom de domaine mais désindexez complètement le contenu via robots.txt et Search Console.
Les redirections 301 transfèrent-elles 100% du PageRank ?
Google a confirmé que les redirections 301 transfèrent la quasi-totalité du PageRank, mais n'a jamais donné de chiffre officiel précis. Les estimations empiriques tournent autour de 98-99%, contre 15-25% pour un lien classique.
Combien de temps prend généralement une migration de domaine avec transfert complet d'autorité ?
Entre 4 et 12 semaines pour que Google recrawle, réindexe et réévalue l'ensemble. Les sites massifs (50k+ pages) peuvent nécessiter 6 mois. Le trafic suit généralement avec 2-4 semaines de décalage par rapport à l'indexation.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Links & Backlinks Redirects

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