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Official statement

For replaced products, use the old URL for the new product and move the old product to an archive section to maintain the authority of the page and its visibility in search results.
26:02
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:08 💬 EN 📅 18/02/2020 ✂ 9 statements
Watch on YouTube (26:02) →
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📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends reusing the URL of an exhausted product for its replacement, while archiving the old product elsewhere. The goal: to retain the page authority and visibility gained. This prevents loss of PageRank and accumulated trust signals — but this approach raises questions about editorial consistency and user relevance, especially if the products differ significantly.

What you need to understand

Why does Google stress the reuse of product URLs?

The recommendation from John Mueller serves a straightforward goal: to preserve the SEO capital accumulated by a product page. A URL that generated backlinks, traffic, and engagement signals holds authority that Google recognizes in its link graph.

By recycling this URL for a similar new product, you avoid starting from scratch. 301 redirects do transfer some authority, but not all — and importantly, they create an extra hop for crawlers and users. Google favors continuity: a stable URL signals a lasting resource.

What does it really mean to "move the old product to an archive section"?

The idea is to migrate obsolete content to a less prioritized area of the site, typically a section like "Old Products" or "Archives." This section can be accessed through internal linking, but it does not appear in the main menus or active product feeds.

The old product remains indexable — it does not disappear with a 404 or 410 — thus maintaining historical coherence for users who may have bookmarked or shared the page. However, its SEO weight is transferred to the new version occupying the original URL.

What is Google's underlying logic in this approach?

Google thinks in terms of thematic continuity and authority signaling. A URL dealing with a standard product — let’s say "running shoes X" — retains its relevance if it evolves into "running shoes Y," especially if the category and search intent remain the same.

External links pointing to this URL retain their value: even if the product changes, the thematic context remains coherent. This is a very PageRank-centric view: the authority of a page does not depend on the current content, but on the historical links and signals it has received.

  • Preserve the page authority accumulated through backlinks and engagement signals
  • Avoid systematic 301 redirects that dilute PageRank and slow down crawling
  • Maintain historical coherence for users who have bookmarked or shared the URL
  • Archive the old product to keep an indexable trace without cannibalizing the visibility of the new one
  • Favor thematic continuity: Google prioritizes stable URLs in its link graph

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation still practically relevant?

On paper, the logic stands: recycling a strong URL instead of creating a new orphaned page makes sense from a PageRank perspective. But this approach assumes that the new product remains in the same semantic category as the old one. If you replace "black iPhone 12" with "black iPhone 13," that works. If you replace "running shoes" with "beach sandals," the thematic break becomes problematic.

Search engines no longer just count links — they analyze contextual coherence. A drastic product change can create a confusing signal for crawlers, especially if the anchor texts of external links no longer match the new content. [To verify] how far Google tolerates these semantic breaks without penalty.

What risks does this practice pose for user experience?

A user arriving at a URL via an old link or bookmark expects to find the product they consulted. If they encounter a different product, even if archived elsewhere, the experience is degraded. Google increasingly values engagement signals — bounce rate, time spent, clicks — and user confusion can reverse the expected SEO gains.

Archiving the old product is a partial solution, but it assumes that users can easily find the new archive page. If this is not the case, you create frustration, which translates into negative signals. Mueller's recommendation prioritizes technique over UX — and that’s a limitation.

In which cases does this rule not apply?

If your catalog frequently turns over and replacement products have no thematic continuity, this approach becomes counterproductive. Typically, a fashion site with seasonal collections would struggle to justify that a URL "flower summer dress" becomes "wool winter coat" six months later.

Similarly, if the old product still generates significant long-tail traffic — via specific queries, external reviews — archiving it could lead to lost conversions. In such cases, it’s better to keep the old product in place with a status of "out of stock" and create a new URL for the replacement, with good internal linking between the two.

Warning: This recommendation from Google does not account for CMS constraints or editorial workflows. In some e-commerce environments (Shopify, Magento), modifying a product URL to accommodate a new product may break analytics tracking, advertising campaigns, or third-party data feeds. Always check the technical impact before applying this guideline strictly.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to apply this recommendation?

First, audit your out-of-stock products to identify those that hold significant authority — backlinks, residual organic traffic, positions on strategic queries. Not all products deserve to be recycled: focus on those with a measurable SEO capital.

Then, prepare a clean archive section — not a catch-all indexable space without logic. This section should be linked from the footer or a secondary menu, with canonical tags pointing to itself. The old product migrates there with its complete content, including customer reviews if relevant, to maintain historical coherence.

What mistakes should be avoided in this migration?

Never delete old content without keeping an indexable trace. A sudden removal with 404 or 410 wastes acquired authority and creates dead-ends for external links. Even if the old product is archived, it must remain accessible to Google and users.

Avoid recycling a URL if the new product has no semantic continuity with the old one. A strong thematic break sends contradictory signals to crawlers and dilutes the page's relevance. In this case, it's better to create a new URL and redirect the old one to a parent category or another still-active similar product.

How to check that the migration preserves authority?

Monitor the evolution of organic traffic on the recycled URL after the product replacement. If you observe a sharp drop, it’s likely that Google has detected an inconsistency. Also, keep an eye on positions on key queries associated with the old product — they should remain stable or evolve towards relevant variations for the new one.

Use Search Console to verify that the backlinks pointing to the URL remain active and that Google continues to crawl them. If you notice a de-indexing or a visible loss of PageRank (via third-party tools), it indicates that the migration has not been perceived as continuity by the algorithms.

  • Audit out-of-stock products to identify those with measurable authority (backlinks, traffic, positions)
  • Create a clean archive section with internal linking and coherent canonical tags
  • Migrate the complete old content (reviews, specs, images) to the archive page
  • Check the semantic continuity between the old and new products before recycling the URL
  • Monitor traffic and positions on the recycled URL in the weeks post-migration
  • Check active backlinks through Search Console to ensure they remain valued
Recycling a product URL can preserve valuable SEO capital, but this approach requires strict thematic coherence and rigorous analytical monitoring. If your catalog is complex or your CMS workflows make this migration risky, expert support can prevent costly mistakes — a specialized SEO agency will be able to map your existing authority and orchestrate these transitions without loss of visibility.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je rediriger l'URL de l'ancien produit vers la page d'archives ?
Non. L'URL reste identique et accueille le nouveau produit. L'ancien produit est copié vers une nouvelle URL dans la section d'archives, sans redirection depuis l'URL d'origine.
Que se passe-t-il si le nouveau produit a un titre et des specs complètement différents ?
Google peut interpréter cela comme une rupture thématique, ce qui dilue la pertinence de la page. Privilégiez cette approche uniquement si les produits restent dans la même catégorie sémantique.
Est-ce que les avis clients de l'ancien produit doivent rester sur l'URL recyclée ?
Non, ils doivent migrer vers la page d'archives avec l'ancien produit. Conserver des avis non pertinents sur le nouveau produit crée de la confusion et nuit à l'expérience utilisateur.
Comment gérer les backlinks pointant vers l'URL si le produit change radicalement ?
Les backlinks restent actifs et transmettent leur autorité, mais si le contexte d'ancre ne correspond plus au nouveau contenu, leur pertinence SEO diminue. C'est un risque de cette approche.
Faut-il désindexer la section d'archives pour éviter le contenu dupliqué ?
Non, au contraire. La section d'archives doit rester indexable avec des balises canonical pointant sur elle-même. C'est cette indexation qui maintient la cohérence historique et évite les dead-ends pour les liens externes.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content E-commerce Domain Name

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