Official statement
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Google recommends that small sites transition fully to HTTPS in one go rather than in stages. This approach speeds up the crawling and indexing of the secure version. The prerequisite: meticulously ensure the HTTPS version is functional before initiating the complete switch, or risk losing rankings.
What you need to understand
Why does Google recommend a one-time HTTPS migration for small sites?
Mueller's statement specifically targets small sites, those that do not have thousands of indexed pages. For these sites, a gradual migration creates a situation where two versions coexist: HTTP and HTTPS.
This coexistence slows down the indexing process. Googlebot must crawl both versions, understand the redirects, and consolidate the signals. By migrating everything at once, you force Google to switch quickly to the new version.
What exactly do we mean by 'small site' in this context?
Google never gives a precise threshold. Field experience suggests that a small site generally has fewer than 500 to 1000 indexed pages. This is a volume that Googlebot can quickly recrawl.
For a site of this size, the technical burden of a total migration remains manageable. The risks of failure are proportionally lower than for a site with 50,000 URLs, where a single redirect error can affect hundreds of pages simultaneously.
What does it really mean to 'verify that the HTTPS version works'?
This verification is not just a formality. You need to ensure that every important URL responds correctly over HTTPS, that the certificates are valid, and that mixed content (images, CSS, JS in HTTP on an HTTPS page) is eliminated.
Common errors include poorly configured redirects, unnecessary redirect chains (HTTP → HTTPS → HTTPS/www), or pages returning 4xx or 5xx codes in HTTPS while functioning in HTTP. A single critical error can block indexing.
- Total migration recommended for sites with fewer than 500-1000 pages
- Avoid HTTP/HTTPS coexistence that slows down crawling and dilutes signals
- Complete technical validation before migration: certificates, redirects, mixed content, response codes
- Post-migration monitoring is essential to quickly detect indexing errors
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with field observations?
Yes, but with important nuances. In practice, total HTTPS migrations for small sites indeed go better than gradual migrations. We usually see indexing return to normal in 2 to 4 weeks.
The problem arises when practitioners interpret 'small site' too broadly. I have seen sites with 5000 URLs migrate at once with disastrous consequences because a configuration error affected 20% of the pages at once. The crawl budget was exhausted on 404 errors.
When should you ignore this advice and migrate gradually?
If your site has more than 1000 indexed pages, or if you have sections with different technical configurations (blog, e-commerce, forum), a sectioned migration is still more prudent. This limits potential damage.
Another case: sites with a history of penalties or chronic indexing issues. Migrating all at once can worsen the situation if Google needs to massively reevaluate the site. [To be verified]: Google has never formally documented how it handles quality signals during a total versus gradual migration.
What are the real reasons behind this recommendation?
Let's be honest: Google wants to simplify its job. A total migration generates a clear signal: this site is moving to HTTPS, period. No ambiguity, no mixed version to manage for months.
For you, the benefit is symmetrical: you avoid canonicalization errors where Google indexes the wrong version or dilutes your ranking signals between HTTP and HTTPS. But this simplicity comes at a price: zero margin for error at the time of migration.
Practical impact and recommendations
How do you technically prepare for the HTTPS migration before switching?
Start by installing a valid SSL certificate across the entire domain. Manually test each important section of the site in HTTPS: homepage, main categories, key product pages or articles. Make sure all resources (images, CSS, JavaScript) load correctly.
Then set up your 301 redirects from HTTP to HTTPS at the server level (.htaccess, Nginx, etc.). Test these redirects with a tool like Screaming Frog on a sample of 50-100 URLs. Track redirect chains and loops. A single error can block indexing of dozens of pages.
What is the recommended complete switch procedure?
Once the tests are validated, activate the 301 redirects for the entire site. In Search Console, add the HTTPS property if not already done, and submit a new XML sitemap pointing to the HTTPS URLs.
Update the internal links in your content to point directly to HTTPS. Don't rely solely on 301 redirects: they unnecessarily consume crawl budget. Also modify your canonical tags to point to the HTTPS versions.
What indicators should you monitor after migration?
The first 48 hours are critical. Check Search Console daily for crawling errors (4xx, 5xx, invalid certificates). Ensure the number of indexed pages in HTTPS increases while those in HTTP decrease.
Also monitor your organic positions with your usual tool (SEMrush, Ahrefs, etc.). A sharp drop generally signals a major technical error. Traffic may fluctuate slightly for 1-2 weeks, but a drop of more than 15% requires immediate investigation.
- Install and validate the SSL certificate across the entire domain
- Set up HTTP → HTTPS 301 redirects at the server level
- Test a sample of URLs with Screaming Frog to detect errors
- Add the HTTPS property in Search Console and submit the XML sitemap
- Update internal links and canonical tags to HTTPS
- Monitor crawling errors daily for the first 2 weeks
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle est la durée typique d'une migration HTTPS pour un petit site ?
Faut-il conserver les redirections 301 de HTTP vers HTTPS de manière permanente ?
La migration HTTPS d'un coup affecte-t-elle le positionnement temporairement ?
Peut-on appliquer cette méthode à un site de 2000 pages ?
Comment traiter les backlinks pointant vers les anciennes URLs HTTP ?
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