Official statement
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Google confirms that migrating from HTTP to HTTPS requires less processing effort than a complete domain change. The reason? The domain and URL structure remain the same, only the protocol changes. For SEO, this means a lower risk of traffic loss and a shorter processing time, though it's not an instantaneous operation.
What you need to understand
What makes an HTTPS migration technically simpler for Google?
When Google talks about processing simplicity, it refers to the computational load needed to update its indexes. During a domain change, the algorithm has to recalculate the authority of the new domain, reassess all trust signals, and link the old profile to the new site. This is a heavy process that involves hundreds of millions of computations.
With an HTTPS migration, the domain identity remains unchanged. Google just needs to understand that example.com/page and https://example.com/page point to the same content. Technically, this is a much less resource-intensive matching operation. PageRank, indexing history, and existing trust signals remain tied to the original domain.
Why does every change still take time to process?
The statement makes it clear that “every change takes some time”. This delay corresponds to Google's crawl and processing cycle. The bot has to revisit all HTTP pages, notice the 301 redirection to HTTPS, and then gradually update the index. On a site with 10,000 pages, this can take several weeks.
The crawl budget plays a central role here. Google will not instantly crawl all your HTTPS URLs on the day of migration. It will first discover the main pages, then the less prioritized sections. A site with low authority or a complex structure will see this process spread out more than a high-performing site.
Does this “simplicity” apply to all types of sites?
Google is referring to an ideal scenario here: a clean migration, with correctly configured 301 redirects and no URL changes other than the protocol. In reality, many HTTPS migrations come with structural changes, partial redesigns, or fixes for historical errors. As soon as you change something other than the protocol, you step away from this “simple” ground.
Sites with geolocated content, multiple subdomains, or complex CDN configurations frequently encounter complications. An HTTPS migration on a site with 500,000 pages, 20 subdomains, and a shaky technical architecture remains objectively complex, even if Google considers it “simpler” than a total domain change.
- The domain and URL structure remain the same, only the protocol changes
- Google simply needs to update its indexes without recalculating the domain's authority
- The processing time depends on the crawl budget and site size
- The “simplicity” assumes a clean migration without other structural modifications
- Complex sites (multi-domain, CDN, geolocation) may face obstacles
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Experiences confirm that well-executed HTTPS migrations indeed result in less traffic loss than domain migrations. The figures I regularly observe show a temporary decline of 5-15% on an HTTPS migration, compared to 20-40% on a domain change. The recovery is also faster: 4-8 weeks for HTTPS, versus 3-6 months for a new domain.
But be cautious about Google's phrasing. “Easier to process” does not mean “without risk.” I have seen poorly prepared HTTPS migrations destroy 50% of organic traffic in just a few days: cascading redirects, misconfigured certificates, unresolved mixed content, canonicals pointing to HTTP. Mueller's statement implicitly assumes flawless technical execution.
What factors does Google not mention here?
The statement remains silent on several critical points. First, the impact of Core Web Vitals: a poorly optimized HTTPS migration can degrade loading times if the SSL/TLS certificate is not configured correctly. Next, the issue of backlinks: Google says nothing about the transfer of PageRank through 301 redirects in this specific context. [To be verified]: Does theoretical PageRank loss via redirects apply differently for HTTPS?
Another missing point: mobile-first indexing. An HTTPS migration that introduces differences between mobile and desktop can create issues that Google will not address as “simply” as the statement suggests. Sites with client-side JavaScript must ensure that their HTTPS redirects function correctly in all rendering contexts.
When does this “simple” migration become risky?
The simplicity touted by Google collapses as soon as you pile on several projects. An HTTPS migration combined with a redesign, a CMS change, or globalization becomes exponentially riskier. I have seen teams lose track and create cascading errors: mixed canonical links, broken hreflang, outdated sitemaps.
E-commerce sites with thousands of product variants and dynamic URLs encounter specific complications. URL parameters must be handled carefully: if your redirects do not correctly manage query strings, you may create thousands of 404 errors. Google will not perform miracles if your technical migration is sloppy, “processing simplicity” or not.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you check before launching the HTTPS migration?
Before even activating the SSL certificate, map out your entire site. Export all your HTTP URLs from your sitemap and your preferred crawling tool. Identify existing redirects, canonicals, hreflang. You must have a complete view of the current structure to ensure that every element is correctly migrated.
Test your HTTPS configuration in a staging environment. Check that all embedded elements (images, CSS, JS, iframes) are also served over HTTPS. A single HTTP element on an HTTPS page creates mixed content that triggers browser alerts and can degrade your Core Web Vitals. Use browser development tools to detect these issues before deployment.
What critical mistakes must absolutely be avoided?
The most common mistake: configuring 301 redirects from HTTP to HTTPS but forgetting to update internal links. Result: every internal click generates an unnecessary redirect, slowing down the site and potentially diluting PageRank. Modify all your internal links to point directly to HTTPS URLs before migration.
Another classic pitfall: leaving canonicals pointing to the old HTTP URLs. Google will receive conflicting signals and take much longer to consolidate the index. Review all your templates, plugins, and third-party tools that automatically generate canonical tags. A single forgotten template can affect thousands of pages.
How to ensure Google is processing the migration correctly?
In the weeks following the migration, monitor Google Search Console with obsessive attention. Check that impressions and clicks are gradually shifting to HTTPS URLs. An abnormal lag or sharp drop signals a technical issue to be corrected immediately.
Compare the number of indexed pages before and after migration. If you notice a significant drop in the number of indexed pages, it indicates that Google is encountering obstacles: 4xx/5xx errors, mixed content, cascading redirects. Use coverage reports to precisely identify problematic URLs and correct them as you go.
- Map all existing HTTP URLs and their link structure
- Test the HTTPS configuration in staging with all embedded elements
- Update all internal links to point directly to HTTPS
- Ensure that all canonicals, hreflang, and sitemaps point to HTTPS
- Set up permanent 301 redirects from HTTP to HTTPS
- Monitor Search Console daily for the first 4 weeks
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il compter pour qu'une migration HTTPS soit complètement traitée par Google ?
Dois-je garder les redirections 301 HTTP vers HTTPS indéfiniment ?
Une migration HTTPS peut-elle améliorer mon classement dans les résultats de recherche ?
Que se passe-t-il si je ne configure pas de redirections 301 lors de la migration HTTPS ?
Faut-il soumettre un nouveau sitemap après la migration HTTPS ?
🎥 From the same video 8
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