Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:06 Faut-il vraiment limiter le nombre de mots-clés dans vos H1 et Title tags ?
- 5:50 Le contenu dupliqué entre plusieurs sites locaux est-il vraiment sans danger pour le SEO ?
- 8:49 Pourquoi vos avis produits n'apparaissent-ils pas en rich snippets malgré un balisage parfait ?
- 11:29 Comment Google détermine-t-il la fréquence de crawl de vos pages ?
- 20:35 Faut-il vraiment paniquer si HTTP et HTTPS coexistent sur un site ?
- 28:46 Le design One Page tue-t-il vraiment le taux de rebond et le SEO ?
- 40:45 Pourquoi une redirection 301 ne transfère-t-elle pas toujours 100% du PageRank vers la nouvelle URL ?
- 47:22 Faut-il vraiment désindexer les produits saisonniers hors saison ?
- 60:00 Faut-il vraiment noindexer le contenu généré par les utilisateurs de faible qualité ?
Google states that hosting a site in the targeted country is not mandatory if geographic targeting is set up via Search Console. This statement relieves SEOs from a costly technical constraint, but it simplifies a more complex reality. Hosting remains a weak signal among other geographic criteria: domain extension, localized content, regional backlinks, and structured data.
What you need to understand
Why does Google downplay the importance of server location?
For years, local hosting was seen as a geographic ranking criterion. The idea was that a server in Paris would rank better in France than a server in New York. This logic was based on latency and the physical proximity of users.
Google has gradually refined its methods of content geolocation, making the server's IP less decisive. The engine now prioritizes more reliable signals: domain extension (.fr, .de), targeting settings in Search Console, content language, mentions of local addresses, and backlinks from regional sites.
What exactly is Geotargeting in Search Console?
Geotargeting is a manual setting available in Google Search Console for generic domains (.com, .net, .org). It allows you to explicitly inform Google which country your site targets. For example, a .com hosted in the United States can be set to target France.
This feature does not exist for country-specific domains (.fr, .uk) because the extension itself already serves as a geographic signal. Google considers that a .fr naturally targets France, unless otherwise configured via hreflang or content that is clearly international.
Is local hosting still useful for SEO?
Yes, but indirectly. A server close to users improves loading speed, a Core Web Vitals criterion that impacts ranking. If your audience is French and your server is in Sydney, latency may hinder user experience, thus affecting SEO.
Local hosting is also relevant for legal and compliance reasons (GDPR, data sovereignty). Some regulated sectors require servers within the EU. In these contexts, the SEO argument becomes secondary to legal constraints.
- Weak signal: The server's IP alone is no longer sufficient to rank locally.
- Priority to structural signals: Domain extension, Search Console, hreflang, localized content.
- Crucial speed: A remote server can slow down the site and impact Core Web Vitals.
- Legal compliance: Some countries mandate local hosting for legal reasons.
- Regional backlinks: A link profile rooted in the target country reinforces the geographic signal far more than a local server.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with on-the-ground observations?
Overall yes, but with important nuances. In practice, a geographically well-optimized site can rank without issue from a foreign server, provided the other signals are strong: .fr or Search Console targeting, content in French, French backlinks, local physical address.
Let's be honest: Google doesn't say hosting is completely neutral. It says it's not necessary, which means it remains a signal among others. In edge cases (two equivalent sites, similar geographic signals), the server's IP can tip the scale. [To be confirmed] in ultra-competitive markets.
What situations complicate this general rule?
Multilingual sites with multi-country targeting on a single domain are the most delicate. A .com with /fr/, /de/, /es/ hosted in the USA must compensate with a performant CDN, impeccable hreflang, and strong local signals (backlinks, content, addresses).
Low-competition markets easily accept remote hosting. In highly competitive local queries (lawyer Paris, plumber Lyon), every signal counts. A competitor hosted locally with a solid French link profile will have a small but real advantage.
In what contexts is local hosting still recommended?
When latency becomes critical: e-commerce with thousands of pages, resource-intensive media sites. A CDN can compensate, but maintaining local infrastructure is simpler.
When the legal context requires it: health, finance, sensitive data. GDPR encourages EU hosting to limit data transfers outside Europe. In these sectors, the SEO argument takes a backseat to legal compliance.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize checking on a multi-country site?
First, the domain extension and Search Console targeting. A .com targeting France must have Geotargeting activated in Search Console > Settings > International targeting. If you're using a .fr, this setting does not exist: the extension is sufficient.
Next, check that the content, backlinks, and local signals are consistent. A .fr hosted in France with English content and American backlinks will not rank in France. Google seeks overall consistency, not an isolated signal.
What mistakes should be avoided when targeting multiple countries?
Never mix geographic targeting on the same domain without strict hreflang. A .com with /fr/ and /de/ without hreflang creates duplicate content and contradictory geographic signals. Google becomes confused about which country to target.
Also, avoid neglecting Core Web Vitals on the grounds that hosting is not critical. A poorly configured remote server slows down the site, penalizes LCP and FID, and destroys user experience. Speed remains a direct ranking factor.
How can you optimize an international site without multiplying servers?
A well-configured global CDN (Cloudflare, Fastly, AWS CloudFront) distributes content from local points of presence, reducing latency without duplicating infrastructure. This is the most cost-effective solution for multi-country sites.
Ensure that each language version has regional backlinks. A /fr/ should receive links from French sites, a /de/ from German sites. Local backlinks strengthen the geographic signal far more than a physical server.
- Check the geographic targeting in Search Console for .com, .net, .org
- Audit the consistency of language/content/backlinks for each targeted country
- Implement hreflang if you manage multiple language versions on a domain
- Measure Core Web Vitals by region to detect latency issues
- Set up a global CDN if your hosting is distant from primary targets
- Obtain local backlinks for each targeted market
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site .com hébergé aux USA peut-il ranker en France sans serveur local ?
Le Geotargeting dans Search Console fonctionne-t-il pour un .fr ?
Un CDN remplace-t-il complètement l'hébergement local pour le SEO ?
L'hébergement local aide-t-il pour les recherches géolocalisées type 'près de moi' ?
Dois-je changer d'hébergeur si mon serveur est trop loin de ma cible principale ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 25/04/2014
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