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Official statement

Google does not recommend using an m.mobile subdomain (m.domain.com) for the mobile version of your site. This practice was used for sites that didn't have a proper mobile version.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 20/07/2023 ✂ 15 statements
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Other statements from this video 14
  1. Les ccTLD donnent-ils vraiment un avantage géographique en SEO ?
  2. Le choix du TLD a-t-il un impact sur le référencement naturel ?
  3. Faut-il vraiment éviter les TLD bon marché pour son référencement ?
  4. Pourquoi Google traite-t-il certains ccTLD comme des domaines génériques ?
  5. Les domaines .edu et .gov offrent-ils vraiment un avantage SEO ?
  6. Le choix du nom de domaine (TLD) a-t-il vraiment un impact sur le référencement ?
  7. Un TLD en .coffee ou .tech booste-t-il vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
  8. Faut-il systématiquement vérifier l'historique d'un domaine avant de l'acheter ?
  9. Pourquoi ne peut-on détecter les actions manuelles qu'après avoir acheté un domaine expiré ?
  10. Les mots-clés dans le nom de domaine sont-ils vraiment si peu efficaces pour le SEO ?
  11. Les tirets dans les noms de domaine pénalisent-ils vraiment le SEO ?
  12. Faut-il privilégier le branding aux mots-clés exacts dans le nom de domaine ?
  13. WWW ou non-WWW : votre choix de sous-domaine impacte-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
  14. Faut-il vraiment éviter les pages 'Coming Soon' sur un nouveau domaine ?
📅
Official statement from (2 years ago)
TL;DR

Google strongly discourages using an m.mobile subdomain (like m.domain.com) to serve a site's mobile version. This architecture, a remnant from an era before responsive design existed, unnecessarily complicates technical management and dilutes SEO signals. Responsive design or dynamic serving on the same domain remain the preferred options.

What you need to understand

Why does Google oppose m. subdomains?

Mobile subdomain architecture (m.domain.com) dates back to an era when sites didn't have adaptive versions. This approach forces you to maintain two distinct versions of the site, which doubles maintenance overhead and fragments SEO signals between two different technical entities.

Google considers this practice obsolete since the advent of responsive design. The separation creates indexing, canonicalization, and PageRank transfer problems that simply don't exist with a unified architecture.

What technical complications does this structure create?

An m. subdomain requires setting up 302 redirects (or user-agent detection) to route mobile users to the correct version. Each URL must have its exact equivalent on the subdomain, with bidirectional rel="alternate" and rel="canonical" tags.

This complexity multiplies error risks: orphaned URLs, redirect loops, out-of-sync content. Google must crawl and index two versions, which wastes crawl budget unnecessarily.

What alternatives does Google recommend?

The preferred solution remains responsive design: a single site with one URL per piece of content that automatically adapts to all screen sizes. It's the simplest architecture to maintain and most effective for SEO.

Dynamic serving is an acceptable alternative: same URL, but different HTML content depending on the user-agent. This requires the Vary: User-Agent header but avoids signal fragmentation.

  • Responsive design consolidates all SEO signals into a single version
  • m. subdomains fragment PageRank and complicate indexing
  • Maintaining a separate architecture doubles technical error risks
  • Google no longer prioritizes crawling separate mobile versions since mobile-first indexing

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation really new?

Let's be honest: Google has discouraged mobile subdomains since at least 2015. It's not a revelation, but a reminder in the face of practices that still persist, particularly on legacy sites or media groups that migrated to mobile later.

The real turning point was mobile-first indexing deployment, which made this architecture not just obsolete, but potentially penalizing. Google now prioritizes indexing the mobile version—and if that version lives on a separate subdomain, technical complexity explodes.

Which sites still use this structure?

We still see m. subdomains on older e-commerce platforms, news sites that migrated gradually, or proprietary CMSs that are hard to overhaul. In some cases, migrating to responsive represents a technical project too heavy for understaffed teams.

The problem is that maintaining this architecture costs more long-term than migrating. Synchronization errors between desktop and mobile versions generate support tickets, traffic losses, and growing technical debt. [To verify]: Google claims this architecture isn't directly penalizing, but field observations show recurring indexing problems on poorly configured sites.

Are there cases where this rule might have exceptions?

Technically, with perfect implementation—all bidirectional tags in place, flawless synchronization, clean redirects—a mobile subdomain site can work. But this is extremely rare in practice.

Some argue that for complex web applications, serving a simplified mobile version on a separate subdomain allows performance optimization. This is debatable: a good responsive design with lazy loading and code splitting achieves the same results without architectural complexity.

If your site still uses an m. subdomain, plan a migration to responsive design. Maintenance costs far exceed the initial investment in a well-executed redesign.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do if your site still uses m.domain.com?

First step: audit the quality of your current implementation. Verify that all desktop URLs have mobile equivalents, that rel alternate/canonical tags are bidirectional and consistent, and that redirects function without loops.

If the audit reveals errors—and it almost always does—you have two options: fix the current setup while planning a migration, or accelerate your redesign timeline. Temporary fixes only delay the inevitable.

How do you plan the migration to responsive?

The migration must follow a structured process: complete URL inventory, 1:1 mapping between mobile and desktop versions, redirect plan with 301s, then phased rollout by site sections.

Test each phase in a staging environment. Use Search Console to monitor mobile-first indexing and catch errors before they impact traffic. A poorly executed migration can drop traffic by 30 to 50%.

What errors should you avoid during the transition?

The classic mistake: abruptly removing the mobile subdomain without 301 redirects to corresponding desktop URLs. Result: massive PageRank loss and 404 explosion.

Another trap: migrating without verifying that responsive is truly functional. A site that displays poorly on mobile after migration is worse than a well-configured subdomain. Test on real devices, not just Chrome's simulator.

  • Audit current implementation: alternate/canonical tags, redirects, content synchronization
  • Map all mobile URLs to their desktop equivalents in a redirect file
  • Deploy responsive design in a test environment and validate display on all devices
  • Set up 301 redirects from the m. subdomain to the main domain
  • Monitor Search Console for 2-3 months to detect indexing errors
  • Remove alternate/canonical tags once migration is stable
Migrating from a mobile subdomain architecture to responsive design represents a complex technical project requiring specialized SEO expertise. Between URL mapping, redirect management, and post-migration monitoring, the risks of traffic loss are real. If your internal team lacks experience with this type of project, engaging a specialized SEO agency can secure the transition and prevent costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un sous-domaine m. pénalise-t-il directement mon référencement ?
Google affirme que non, à condition que l'implémentation soit parfaite. Dans la pratique, les erreurs de configuration (balises manquantes, contenus désynchronisés) sont fréquentes et dégradent les performances SEO.
Puis-je garder mon sous-domaine mobile si tout fonctionne correctement ?
Techniquement oui, mais cette architecture devient de plus en plus difficile à maintenir. Google ne la recommande plus, et les coûts de maintenance dépassent l'investissement d'une migration vers le responsive.
Combien de temps prend une migration du sous-domaine m. vers le responsive ?
Cela dépend de la taille du site. Pour un site moyen (quelques milliers de pages), comptez 2 à 4 mois entre l'audit, le développement, les tests et la stabilisation post-migration.
Dois-je utiliser des redirections 301 ou 302 pour passer du m. au domaine principal ?
Toujours des 301 (permanentes). Les 302 sont temporaires et ne transfèrent pas le PageRank. Chaque URL du sous-domaine mobile doit rediriger vers son équivalent exact sur le domaine principal.
Le dynamic serving est-il une alternative acceptable au responsive ?
Oui, Google l'accepte. Le dynamic serving sert du HTML différent selon le user-agent mais garde la même URL. Il nécessite l'en-tête Vary: User-Agent et reste plus complexe à maintenir que le responsive.
🏷 Related Topics
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