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Official statement

During a site migration, ensure that the original URL structure is mapped one-to-one to the new structure to correctly transfer signals.
15:14
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 23/07/2019 ✂ 11 statements
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Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends a strict 1:1 mapping between old and new URLs during a migration to properly transfer SEO signals. This guideline aims to avoid losing crawl budget, authority, and rankings. In practice, this exact mapping is not always realistic — some redesigns involve content merging, deletions, or deep restructuring.

What you need to understand

What does a 1:1 mapping of URLs really mean?

A 1:1 mapping means that each URL from the old site corresponds exactly to one URL on the new site. No grouping, no deletion, no generic homepage as a redirect. Google insists on this principle to ensure that ranking signals (backlinks, crawl history, internal PageRank) are transferred properly.

The engine treats a migration like a move. If the destination address is vague or shared among several former tenants, signals get diluted. An approximate mapping tells Google: "This page used to exist, but we’re not really sure where it lives now." The result: loss of rankings, traffic drops, chaotic reindexing.

Why does Google place such importance on URL structure?

Because the URL remains the unique identifier of a page for Googlebot. Even though the engine analyzes the content, the URL serves as a reference for tracing history, linking backlinks, and understanding redirects. When a URL disappears or points to a generic target, Google has to start from scratch to evaluate the new page.

This is particularly critical for high-authority sites or those with thousands of backlinks pointing to specific pages. Poor mapping can fragment this authority. Google doesn’t play guessing games: if the old page A redirects to the Products category instead of a direct equivalent, the historical link gets lost in the noise.

What signals are transferred by a well-mapped 301 redirect?

A correctly configured 301 redirect transfers the majority of PageRank (Google has confirmed there has been no loss of PR for years), backlinks, crawl history, and thematic relevance signals. But this assumes the target page is consistent with the source page — same topic, same search intent, comparable or superior content.

If the target is radically different, Google may partially ignore the redirect or treat it as a soft 404. Signal transfer is not automatic: it depends on the editorial continuity perceived by the algorithm.

  • Strict 1:1 mapping: each old URL points to a unique and relevant new URL.
  • 301 redirects: the only HTTP code that permanently transfers signals (no 302, never meta refresh).
  • Thematic consistency: the target page must address the same intent as the source page.
  • Documented migration plan: comprehensive list of old URLs, new URLs, reason for change (redesign, merging, deletion).
  • Post-migration verification: auditing HTTP codes, crawl rate, changes in rankings over 30-60 days.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this 1:1 rule realistic for all types of migrations?

Let’s be honest: no, not always. Google describes an ideal scenario where the site structure remains the same, only the domain or hierarchy changes. In reality, many migrations involve editorial overhauls — merging redundant content, deleting outdated pages, streamlining the hierarchy. In these cases, 1:1 mapping doesn’t exist.

The challenge then becomes defining the best possible target for each old URL. Sometimes it’s a parent page, sometimes a category, sometimes… nothing (410 Gone). The idea that every page must have a successor is a dogma that can harm the quality of the new site. [To be verified]: Google has never published numerical data on ranking loss rates based on mapping types (1:1, 1:N, N:1).

What are the most penalizing mapping errors?

The worst mistake: redirecting in bulk to the homepage. This is the easy fix when mapping becomes too complex. Result: Google sees thousands of 301s pointing to a single generic URL, interprets this as a weak signal or a soft 404, and gives up. Backlinks get lost, rankings collapse.

Another trap: redirect chains (A → B → C). Google theoretically follows up to 5 hops, but in practice, each hop dilutes the signal and slows down crawling. If migration includes multiple layers (domain change + restructuring), A → C must be mapped directly. And that’s where it gets tricky: many sites manage redirects at the server level without a holistic view, creating unintended chains.

In what cases can we deviate from 1:1 mapping without major setbacks?

When the source content is clearly outdated or duplicated, it’s better to have a 410 Gone than to force a redirect to an unrelated page. Google respects the 410: it signals that the resource no longer exists permanently, and Googlebot stops crawling after a few checks. Backlinks are lost, yes, but at least we do not pollute the new site with shaky redirects.

Content mergers (several thematically close pages combined into one more comprehensive page) can also work — provided the new page is indeed better and more exhaustive. Google tolerates N:1 mapping if the target adds more value than the separate sources. But it requires documentation, testing, and monitoring. No guarantees.

Practical impact and recommendations

How to prepare an effective 1:1 mapping before migration?

First step: crawl the old site (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl, Botify) to obtain the complete list of indexed or indexable URLs. Beware of pitfalls: duplicate URLs, dynamic parameters, paginated pages, AMP versions. You must clean this list to keep only canonical URLs that have traffic or backlinks.

Then, cross-reference with Search Console data (clicks, impressions) and a backlinks tool (Ahrefs, Majestic). This helps prioritize: high-traffic pages or those with a lot of incoming links deserve strict 1:1 mapping and special attention. Zombie pages can be deleted (410) or redirected to a parent category if they have a few residual links.

What mistakes must be absolutely avoided during the switch?

Never launch a migration on a Friday or during busy commercial periods. Post-migration monitoring must be intensive for the first 48 hours — if a redirect chain problem or loop appears, it needs immediate correction. Test redirects on a representative sample before switching the entire site.

Avoid JavaScript redirects or meta refresh: Google follows them, but with delays and signal loss. Only the 301 at the server level (Apache, Nginx, CDN) guarantees a clean transfer. And document each exception to the 1:1 mapping: why a page redirects to another or why it returns a 410. This facilitates post-migration debugging.

How to verify that the signal transfer went smoothly?

Monitor three indicators in the 30 days following the migration: crawl rate (Search Console, Exploration Statistics section), rankings changes (daily tracking of priority keywords), and overall organic traffic (Google Analytics, SEO segment). A 10-15% temporary drop in traffic is normal — beyond that, there is a mapping or content issue.

Also check the HTTP codes returned for old URLs: a post-migration crawler must confirm that all old URLs indeed return a 301 (no 404, no 302). Beware of HTTPS pages redirecting to HTTP and then re-redirecting to HTTPS: this is an invisible chain that drains the crawl budget.

  • Crawl the old site and export the complete list of indexable URLs.
  • Cross-reference with Search Console (traffic) and backlinks (authority) to prioritize.
  • Create a mapping file (old_url | new_url | reason) validated by the SEO team.
  • Test redirects in a staging environment with a sample of 100-200 URLs.
  • Configure 301s at the server level, never in JavaScript or meta refresh.
  • Monitor crawl rate, rankings, and organic traffic daily for 60 days.
A successful site migration relies on a rigorous 1:1 mapping, clean 301 redirects, and intensive post-switch monitoring. Any approximation comes at a cost in traffic and positions. These operations are technical and risky — a configuration error can permanently impact visibility. If your migration involves thousands of URLs or a deep restructuring of the hierarchy, the support of an experienced SEO agency can secure the process and avoid classical pitfalls that only hands-on experience can anticipate.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Peut-on rediriger plusieurs anciennes URLs vers une seule nouvelle page ?
Oui, si la nouvelle page regroupe des contenus thématiquement très proches et apporte plus de valeur que les pages séparées. Google tolère ce mapping N:1, mais il faut que la cible soit exhaustive et pertinente pour toutes les anciennes URLs.
Faut-il rediriger les anciennes URLs en 404 vers la homepage ?
Non, c'est une mauvaise pratique. Mieux vaut renvoyer un 410 Gone pour signaler que la ressource n'existe plus de manière permanente. Google arrêtera de crawler ces URLs après quelques vérifications.
Les redirections 302 transfèrent-elles les signaux SEO ?
Non, une 302 indique un déplacement temporaire. Google ne transfère pas les signaux de ranking de manière durable. Seule la redirection 301 (permanente) assure le transfert complet des signaux.
Combien de temps Google met-il pour recrawler toutes les redirections après une migration ?
Cela dépend du crawl budget et de la taille du site. Pour un site de taille moyenne, compter 2 à 4 semaines. Les pages prioritaires (forte autorité, backlinks) sont recrawlées plus vite.
Peut-on supprimer les anciennes redirections 301 après quelques mois ?
Non, il faut maintenir les redirections de manière permanente, surtout si les anciennes URLs ont des backlinks actifs. Supprimer une 301 revient à casser les liens entrants et perdre les signaux associés.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Name Pagination & Structure Redirects

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