Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 0:32 Faut-il vraiment rediriger toutes les versions HTTP vers HTTPS pour éviter les backlinks incohérents ?
- 7:21 Faut-il vraiment arrêter d'optimiser pour les facteurs de classement Google ?
- 8:26 Les sitelinks échappent-ils vraiment à tout contrôle SEO ?
- 8:26 Les sitelinks sont-ils vraiment pilotables par le SEO ou reste-t-on à la merci de l'algorithme ?
- 11:43 Pourquoi Googlebot bloque-t-il l'accès à votre site et comment y remédier ?
- 13:26 Fetch as Google suffit-il vraiment pour diagnostiquer les blocages de Googlebot ?
- 13:52 Les tendances de recherche tuent-elles votre visibilité organique ?
- 16:00 Combien de liens peut-on placer dans un article de blog sans risquer une pénalité Google ?
- 17:09 Les descriptions dupliquées en pagination affectent-elles vraiment le classement ?
- 28:17 Comment Google indexe-t-il réellement des millions de pages ?
- 31:03 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le référencement naturel ?
- 32:43 Les specs produits identiques sont-elles vraiment exemptes de pénalité duplicate content ?
- 36:31 Faut-il vraiment supprimer du contenu pour éviter Panda ?
- 52:58 Pourquoi Google a-t-il supprimé les photos d'auteur des résultats de recherche ?
Google advises checking all versions of a domain in Search Console to set a preferred domain and manage indexing. This practice aims to avoid signal dilution between www/non-www and HTTP/HTTPS. Specifically, it helps you centralize crawl data and quickly spot canonicalization issues, but this recommendation dates back to when domain properties were not yet available.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize checking multiple versions?
The recommendation from Aaseesh Marina goes back to the time when Search Console operated solely with URL-prefix properties. Each technical variant of your site (http://, https://, www, non-www) was considered a distinct entity.
Without comprehensive verification, you risk fragmenting your analytics data and losing visibility on critical indexing errors. A site accessible both at example.com and www.example.com without a proper 301 redirect generates duplicate content that Google struggles to consolidate.
What is the difference between preferred domain and canonicalization?
The preferred domain feature in the old Search Console interface allowed you to inform Google of your official canonical version. This function influenced the way URLs were displayed in search results but did not replace server-side 301 redirects.
Canonicalization remains a technical responsibility to manage through your server configuration and canonical tags. The Search Console setting was merely a complementary signal, never a workaround for faulty server settings.
Is this recommendation still relevant with domain properties?
Since the introduction of domain properties in Search Console, much of this complexity has largely disappeared. A single DNS verification automatically consolidates all protocol and subdomain variants.
However, many sites still use URL-prefix properties out of habit or necessity (granular access to data by subdomain). In this case, the original recommendation retains its operational relevance.
- URL-prefix Properties: require verification of each variant (http/https, www/non-www) for a comprehensive view
- Domain Properties: automatically aggregate all versions after a single DNS verification
- 301 Redirects: remain mandatory on the server side, regardless of the type of Search Console property
- Canonical Tags: must point to the preferred version to consolidate the ranking signal
- HTTPS Migration: requires explicit verification of the new version to track transitional errors
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with observed practices?
The recommendation reflects an outdated technical reality but contains a principle that still holds true: the need to control all your exposure surfaces on Google. In practice, sites that neglect complete verification often uncover invisible indexing errors that drain crawl budget.
However, Google remains vague on the actual impact of the "preferred domain" setting on rankings. Empirical tests show that 301 redirects weigh significantly more than this Search Console setting, which seems primarily to serve the display of URLs in SERPs. [To be verified]: no official documentation quantifies the influence of this setting on PageRank transfer.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
The directive assumes that all versions are technically accessible, which indicates a configuration error. A properly configured site should only expose one canonical version, with others redirecting to permanent 301 redirects.
Checking all versions in Search Console does not rectify a problem with failing redirects. It is a diagnostic tool, not a solution. If you notice multiple versions indexing simultaneously, the issue lies at the server level or in your canonical tags, not in Search Console.
In what situations does this rule not fully apply?
Sites using a domain property in Search Console no longer need this gymnastics. A single DNS verification aggregates all data. This evolution renders the original recommendation partially obsolete, although understanding the underlying logic remains useful.
Multi-regional sites with subdomains by language (fr.example.com, en.example.com) represent an edge case. Here, verifying each subdomain makes sense, but for analytical segmentation reasons rather than strict canonicalization.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do today?
Start with an audit of your domain variants. Test manually http://example.com, https://example.com, http://www.example.com, https://www.example.com. Each non-canonical version should return a 301 redirect to your preferred URL, not a temporary 302.
Next, set up a domain property in Search Console if you haven't done so already. This requires DNS access to add a verification TXT record. This method automatically aggregates all the data without multiplying properties.
What mistakes should be avoided during this verification?
Do not confuse Search Console verification with technical resolution. Verifying an HTTP version in Search Console while your site is on HTTPS is pointless if you have not implemented redirects. It is like installing a counter on a locked door.
Also, avoid setting a preferred domain in Search Console that contradicts your canonical tags. This inconsistency creates a mixed signal that Google has to arbitrate, often not in your favor. Always align server configuration, canonical tags, and Search Console settings.
How can I check if my site is correctly configured?
Use a redirect testing tool (curl in command line or an online HTTP checker). Check that all non-canonical versions return a 301 code with the correct Location header. A 302 or 307 indicates a temporary redirect that Google does not consolidate permanently.
In Search Console, monitor the index coverage report. If you see URLs indexed with incorrect protocol or subdomain variants, it means your redirects are not being caught by Googlebot. Correct it server-side before making adjustments in Search Console.
- Manually test the 4 main variants (http/https × www/non-www) and confirm 301 redirects
- Set up a Search Console domain property with DNS verification
- Check that all canonical tags point to the same preferred version
- Audit coverage report to detect URLs indexed on non-canonical versions
- Implement HSTS (HTTP Strict Transport Security) to enforce HTTPS on the browser side
- Update the XML sitemap to reference only canonical URLs
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
La vérification de toutes les versions de domaine dans Search Console améliore-t-elle directement mon classement ?
Dois-je encore vérifier les versions HTTP si mon site est entièrement en HTTPS ?
Quelle différence entre propriété de domaine et propriété URL-prefix dans Search Console ?
Le paramètre domaine préféré dans Search Console existe-t-il encore ?
Que faire si je constate du trafic organique sur une version non-canonique ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 28/08/2014
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