Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 0:38 Faut-il vraiment vérifier toutes les versions de son site pour auditer ses backlinks ?
- 2:08 Pourquoi la canonicalisation et les redirections 301 restent-elles prioritaires pour votre crawl budget ?
- 2:41 Les sitelinks Google s'adaptent-ils vraiment au profil de chaque visiteur ?
- 5:36 Comment éviter que Google fusionne les pages de vos franchises en doublon ?
- 11:38 L'option « masquer » dans Search Console supprime-t-elle vraiment vos URLs de Google ?
- 12:10 Le WHOIS privé pénalise-t-il vraiment le référencement de votre site ?
- 16:57 L'HTTPS page par page : signal de classement surévalué ou opportunité sous-estimée ?
- 18:51 Comment gérer le contenu dupliqué après l'avoir uploadé sur le mauvais domaine ?
- 36:17 Faut-il vraiment isoler les pages dupliquées sur des sous-domaines pour améliorer le SEO ?
- 52:19 Pourquoi Google applique-t-il systématiquement le nofollow aux contenus générés par les utilisateurs ?
- 54:34 Pourquoi une simple refonte visuelle peut-elle faire chuter vos positions Google ?
Google acknowledges that changing domains can be a viable solution in the face of an algorithmic penalty. The decision hinges on weighing the cost of cleaning up the old site against starting from scratch. This position nuances the usual official discourse that always prioritizes on-site correction, implicitly recognizing that some penalties are irreversible or too costly to address.
What you need to understand
Why does Google validate changing domains as a solution?
This statement breaks with Google's traditional stance, which systematically promotes the rehabilitation of the penalized domain. John Mueller admits that a fresh start can be more relevant in certain contexts, which is a rare acknowledgment.
The economic calculation prevails: if cleaning up a toxic backlink profile, removing thousands of poor-quality pages, or fixing a catastrophic technical structure requires six months of hard work, launching a new domain may indeed make more sense. Google recognizes this business reality.
In what cases does this option become relevant?
A domain change is justified when the site's history is irreparably compromised. Domains purchased with a heavy negative SEO history, sites that have practiced extensive black hat techniques for years, or platforms that have suffered repeated hacks with indexing of millions of spam pages fall into this category.
The evaluation must consider several parameters: the brand reputation of the current domain, the ease of 301 redirection to the new one, the ability to retain the audience during the transition. An e-commerce site with strong offline branding will have a harder time switching than an anonymous content site.
What are the real risks of such a switch?
Starting afresh on a new domain means temporarily losing all accumulated authority. 301 redirects pass along some juice, but never 100%, and Google now treats them more as suggestions rather than absolute directives. The new site experiences an implicit sandbox period of several months.
The loss of organic traffic can be drastic, even with perfect redirects. Expect at least 3 to 6 months to regain stable positions on main queries, and often 12 months to recover previous traffic levels. This phase requires a compensatory strategy: paid search, social, email.
- Mandatory cost-benefit analysis: compare time/budget for cleanup vs. restart
- No guarantee: a new domain doesn’t erase structural content or strategy issues
- Critical timing: anticipate 6-12 months of decreased revenue for e-commerce
- Audience retention: maintain newsletters, social media, campaigns to limit losses
- Flawless technical migration: even the slightest mistake amplifies traffic loss
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation aligned with observed ground practices?
Yes, and that’s precisely what makes this statement interesting. In practice, we regularly see cases where the domain switch has worked better than lengthy and costly cleanups. Google finally admits what practitioners have known for a long time.
SEO agencies confronted with clients inheriting poor domains often recommend this option when the burden is too heavy. A domain that has used massive link spam for years can never be completely cleaned: even after disavowal, negative signals persist in the algorithm.
What critical nuances need to be addressed?
Google does not specify a crucial detail here: can the algorithm trace the lineage between the old and new domain? If you migrate all your content via 301, maintain the same structure, and the same link profile (because your partners update their backlinks), Google isn’t naive. The risk of contamination exists. [To be verified] in each specific case.
A second point missing from the statement: the nature of the penalty. A serious Penguin penalty isn’t treated like a duplicate content or thin content issue. For Penguin involving thousands of toxic links, the switch may make sense. For widespread weak content, it’s better to correct on-site.
In what contexts does this strategy systematically fail?
A domain change fails when the same mistakes are repeated on the new site. If the penalty came from a catastrophic editorial strategy (keyword stuffing, auto-generated content, massive duplication), changing domains without changing methods is pointless. The algorithm will catch up with the new domain in a few months.
Sites with strong offline brand recognition take a disproportionate risk when changing domains. An established media outlet, a recognized e-commerce brand loses too much in trust capital and SEO equity. In these cases, cleaning remains the only viable option even if it is long and costly.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to effectively weigh cleaning versus domain switch?
Start by precisely mapping the penalty. Use Search Console to identify affected pages and sections, analyze traffic drop timelines, and cross-reference with algorithm updates. A Penguin targeting 20% of the site does not justify a complete switch.
Next, quantify the real cost of each option. For cleaning: complete technical audit, disavow links, content rewriting, structural corrections. For switching: revenue loss for 6-12 months, cost of developing the new site, paid budget for compensation, risk of never regaining initial levels. Rarely simple.
What critical mistakes should be avoided when changing domains?
Never launch the new domain without having corrected the structural problems that caused the initial penalty. If your old site was penalized for thin content, creating a new domain with the same weak content is suicidal. Google will detect it within weeks.
A second common mistake: misconfigured or partial 301 redirects. Each URL of the old site must have a precise target on the new one, no chained redirects, no 301 to the homepage for 80% of pages. A clean redirect plan is non-negotiable.
What transition strategy should be implemented to limit damage?
Anticipate the drop in organic traffic with a significant paid search budget for at least 6 months. Google Ads, Bing Ads, retargeting display: anything to maintain visibility while the new domain takes root. Expected budget: 30-50% of lost organic revenue.
Communicate extensively with your existing audience. Detailed newsletters, social posts, banners on the old site during the transition. The goal is to migrate direct audience and bookmarks to the new domain before Google completely cuts off the organic traffic flow.
- Audit the cause of the penalty precisely before any decision
- Quantify the real cost of both options (cleaning vs. switching) over 12 months
- Correct all structural SEO issues before launching the new domain
- Prepare a comprehensive and tested 301 redirect plan
- Budget for 6 months of paid search to compensate for lost organic traffic
- Inform the existing audience through all available channels
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un nouveau domaine hérite-t-il de la pénalité de l'ancien via les redirections 301 ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'un nouveau domaine retrouve le trafic de l'ancien ?
Faut-il désavouer les liens toxiques avant de changer de domaine ?
Comment gérer le changement de domaine pour un site e-commerce avec forte notoriété ?
Les backlinks de l'ancien domaine continuent-ils à avoir de la valeur après un switch ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 25/08/2014
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