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Official statement

Merging two websites into one is not a standard site migration. It involves creating a new site that combines two existing versions, which requires Google to re-crawl numerous pages. The outcome and processing speed heavily depend on how the merger is structured, particularly whether the content is mixed or organized into new distinct sections.
6:42
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 20:15 💬 EN 📅 27/08/2020 ✂ 12 statements
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Other statements from this video 11
  1. Faut-il vraiment rediriger toutes les images lors d'une migration de site ?
  2. 2:01 Une migration de domaine fait-elle vraiment perdre du trafic ?
  3. 3:03 L'historique d'un domaine acheté plombe-t-il vraiment une migration SEO ?
  4. 8:14 Comment Google transfère-t-il réellement les signaux lors d'une migration de domaine ?
  5. 9:47 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment pour transférer les signaux SEO lors d'une migration ?
  6. 10:18 Faut-il vraiment utiliser l'outil de changement d'adresse de Google Search Console lors d'une migration ?
  7. 11:23 Une migration déclenche-t-elle une réévaluation qualité par Google ?
  8. 15:05 Faut-il vraiment faire machine arrière après une migration de site qui échoue ?
  9. 17:21 Faut-il vraiment laisser le robots.txt intact pendant une migration SEO ?
  10. 18:42 Faut-il vraiment éviter de tout changer en même temps lors d'une migration SEO ?
  11. 19:43 Migrer de domaine efface-t-il vraiment les pénalités SEO et les mauvais signaux ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google clearly distinguishes between site mergers and migrations: merging two domains creates an entirely new site requiring massive re-crawling. The processing speed directly depends on the chosen structure—mixed content or distinct sections. In practice, a poorly prepared merger can triple the time needed to recover organic traffic compared to a simple migration.

What you need to understand

What is the fundamental difference between migration and merging?

A standard migration involves moving a site from domain A to domain B without changing its architecture or content. Google follows 301 redirects, transfers signals (PageRank, authority), and the process is relatively predictable.

The merging, on the other hand, combines two distinct entities into one. This implies reworking the site structure, deciding where to place each piece of content, and creating a new hybrid structure. Google has to re-crawl everything as if it were discovering a brand new site—gone is the comfort of simple redirection.

Why does Google need to massively re-crawl during a merger?

Because the engine can't simply transfer signals from point A to point B. It has to understand the new relationship between the merged contents: are they competing? complementary? redundant?

The relevance signals (internal links, semantic clusters, page depth) change drastically. A page that was deeply buried in site A may become central in the new structure—or vice versa. Google must reevaluate each URL in its new context.

How does the merging structure impact processing speed?

Martin Splitt emphasizes that architectural choice is crucial. There are two approaches: mixing contents (integrated approach) or creating distinct sections (modular approach).

The modular approach—where each old site retains its own section—facilitates crawling: Google can process each block separately. The integrated approach—where contents are mixed by theme—requires a more detailed analysis of cannibalization signals and semantic consistency, which slows down the process.

  • Merging = new site in Google's eyes, not just a simple move
  • Massive re-crawling is unavoidable—expect several weeks or even months
  • The chosen structure (mixed or modular) directly affects recovery speed
  • Relevance signals must be rebuilt, not just transferred
  • Crawl budget is critical: a merged site with 50k pages requires careful management

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with what we observe in practice?

Absolutely. Mergers consistently cause traffic fluctuations that are much more violent than a standard migration. We often see drops of 30-50% for 2-3 months before stabilization—whereas a well-executed migration limits damage to 10-15% over 3-4 weeks.

What Google doesn’t mention: the real issue isn’t technical but editorial. Merging two sites often means merging two SEO strategies that cannibalize each other. You end up with three pages fighting for the same keyword, "divorce lawyer Paris." Google has to untangle this mess—and that takes time.

What nuances do we need to consider regarding this claim?

Splitt talks about "processing speed" without providing numbers. [To be verified]: are we talking weeks, months, quarters? The answer depends on factors he doesn’t mention: site size, available crawl budget, quality of merged contents.

Another blind spot: the issue of backlinks. Merging two sites means merging two link profiles. If site A has 5000 backlinks pointing to /services/ and site B has 3000 to /offerings/, what happens to that authority when we merge into /offers/? Does Google dilute, consolidate, or ignore it? Splitt remains vague.

In which cases might this logic not fully apply?

If one of the two sites is nearly dead (negligible organic traffic, minimal crawl budget), the merger behaves more like a migration with content increase. Google primarily treats the dominant site and gradually absorbs the other.

Another exception: merging subdomains into a main domain. Technically it’s a merger, but if blog.site.com migrates to site.com/blog/, Google handles this more quickly than a true merger of two distinct domains—the authority signals are already partially shared.

Caution: Splitt doesn’t mention the risk of manual penalties if both sites have dubious histories (spam, artificial links). Merging a clean site with a toxic one can contaminate the entire operation. A prior audit is essential.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should be taken before merging two sites?

First, audit potential cannibalization. Identify all semantic duplicates: if both sites target the same queries, decide which version to keep. Favor the one with the best organic traffic history, not the one that "looks" better written.

Next, map out the redirects upstream. Unlike a standard migration, where it’s a 1:1, here you might have 2:1 (two old URLs to one new), 1:0 (obsolete content that we abandon), or 1:new (refined content). Each choice impacts the crawl budget and processing speed.

How to structure the merger to minimize SEO impact?

The modular approach (distinct sections) is safer but less elegant. It preserves existing thematic silos and facilitates post-merger tracking—you can measure the performance of each old site separately.

The integrated approach is riskier but potentially more performant in the long term. It requires a comprehensive editorial overhaul: merging complementing contents, removing redundancies, and creating a coherent new semantic architecture. That said, the recovery time will be longer—and that’s where many clients struggle.

What mistakes should absolutely be avoided during a site merger?

Never launch a merger during a high-traffic commercial period (Black Friday, sales, product launch). The temporary loss of visibility can cost a fortune. Plan in the off-season.

Also, avoid merging without bolstering the crawl budget beforehand. Submit a new combined XML sitemap, increase the frequency of content updates, and optimize server response times. Google must have the resources to digest this large content quickly.

  • Conduct a comprehensive semantic cannibalization audit (tools: Ahrefs, SEMrush, Screaming Frog)
  • Map all redirects (2:1, 1:1, 1:new) in a thorough mapping file
  • Choose between a modular approach (distinct sections) and integrated approach (mixed contents) based on available resources
  • Prepare a merged XML sitemap and submit it via Search Console before the switch
  • Plan the merger outside of critical commercial periods to endure temporary traffic dips
  • Monitor daily crawl budget and 404 errors post-merger for at least 90 days
A site merger is a surgical SEO operation that requires meticulous preparation and rigorous post-operative monitoring. Unlike a standard migration, there’s no magic formula—each merger is unique and depends on the specificities of the two sites involved. The stakes are multiple: preserving organic traffic, consolidating authority, optimizing crawl budget, managing cannibalization. Given this complexity, many professionals choose to rely on a specialized SEO agency capable of overseeing the entire process—from prior audit to post-merger monitoring—to secure the operation and maximize chances of success.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour traiter complètement une fusion de sites ?
Il n'existe pas de délai standard, mais les observations terrain montrent entre 2 et 6 mois pour une stabilisation du trafic organique, selon la taille des sites et la complexité de la structure fusionnée. Les premiers signaux positifs apparaissent généralement après 4-6 semaines.
Doit-on conserver les deux domaines actifs après la fusion ?
Non, une fois la fusion opérée et les redirections en place, les anciens domaines ne servent que de redirecteurs. Maintenir du contenu actif dessus créerait de la duplication et ralentirait le transfert d'autorité vers le nouveau site unifié.
Comment gérer les backlinks pointant vers les anciens sites après fusion ?
Les redirections 301 transfèrent l'essentiel du jus SEO des backlinks existants. Pour les liens stratégiques, contacte les webmasters pour mettre à jour vers les nouvelles URLs — cela accélère le transfert d'autorité et évite les chaînes de redirections.
L'approche modulaire (sections distinctes) est-elle toujours préférable ?
Elle est plus sûre et rapide à implémenter, mais pas forcément optimale à long terme. Si les deux sites ont des audiences et thématiques très proches, l'approche intégrée peut créer plus de synergie éditoriale — au prix d'un travail initial plus lourd et d'un temps de récupération plus long.
Peut-on fusionner plus de deux sites en même temps ?
Techniquement oui, mais c'est déconseillé. Chaque site supplémentaire multiplie la complexité, le risque de cannibalisation et le temps de traitement par Google. Mieux vaut procéder par étapes : fusionner A+B, stabiliser, puis fusionner le résultat avec C.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Web Performance Redirects International SEO

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 20 min · published on 27/08/2020

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