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Official statement

It is not necessary to regain access to a previous account for the Search Console. You just need to verify the site again with a new account.
7:55
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:46 💬 EN 📅 23/09/2016 ✂ 16 statements
Watch on YouTube (7:55) →
Other statements from this video 15
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  6. 26:12 Les mentions légales impactent-elles vraiment le référencement naturel ?
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  8. 35:27 Peut-on changer de gamme de produits sans ruiner son référencement ?
  9. 37:25 Faut-il vraiment laisser Googlebot explorer vos URL paramétriques ?
  10. 39:07 Les liens de navigation dupliqués sur toutes les pages nuisent-ils vraiment au SEO ?
  11. 43:01 Google peut-il vraiment indexer vos modifications critiques en quelques minutes ?
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  15. 51:21 Le contenu UGC de faible qualité peut-il plomber le classement global de votre site ?
📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that it is not necessary to regain access to a previous Search Console account to verify a site. You can simply create a new verification with a different account. This approach simplifies the management of changes in agency, service provider, or ownership without risking the loss of historical data on Google's side.

What you need to understand

How does Google's clarification change the game?

Many SEO practitioners still believe that a site can only have one valid Search Console account at a time. This confusion stems from a misunderstanding of the verification mechanism. In fact, Google allows multiple simultaneous verifications of the same domain, each linked to a different account.

Specifically, if you lose access to the Gmail account of a former provider, you do not need to recover that account to regain control. You can simply add a new verification through your own account. Both verifications can coexist without conflict.

How does multiple verification work for the same site?

Search Console uses independent verification tokens: HTML file, meta tag, DNS record, Google Analytics, or Google Tag Manager. Each method can be used by multiple accounts simultaneously. As long as the token remains present on the site, the verification stays active.

This means that a site owner can grant access to their current agency while keeping their own direct access. If the agency leaves without transferring the rights, the owner is never blocked. They just need to add their own verification to regain control over the data.

Are historical data affected by a new verification?

This is where many misunderstand. The performance, indexing, and crawl data are stored on Google's side, not within the Search Console account itself. The account is merely an interface for accessing this data.

When you create a new verification, you immediately access the entirety of the available history (usually 16 months for performance reports). You are not starting from scratch. The sitemaps submitted by the old account remain active. Previous reindexing requests are still visible.

  • Multiple accounts can verify the same site without mutual interference
  • Historical data remains accessible via any new verification
  • No risk of visibility loss if an old provider removes their verification
  • Geographic targeting and crawl settings are linked to the site, not the account
  • Only personal reports and annotations do not transfer between accounts

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?

Absolutely. Practitioners managing site portfolios know: you can verify the same domain from multiple Google accounts without any issues. It is even a recommended practice to avoid administrative blockages.

However, Google remains vague on a critical point: which verification takes priority in case of conflict? If two accounts submit different sitemaps or modify targeting settings, which prevails? [To be confirmed] — field observations suggest that the most recent change made takes precedence, but Google does not officially document this.

What nuances should we consider regarding this recommendation?

While adding a new verification is technically straightforward, it does not resolve all issues. Email alerts, for instance, are linked to the account that set them up. If your former provider was the only one receiving notifications of manual penalties or indexing issues, you will not be automatically alerted.

Another point: some third-party tools (Screaming Frog, SEMrush, Ahrefs) require an OAuth connection to a specific Search Console account. If you change accounts, you will need to reconfigure these integrations. This isn't blocking, but it's an additional step that's often overlooked.

What situations can make this rule problematic?

The proliferation of verifications can create confusion in large organizations. Imagine a company with 5 different departments each verifying the site through their own accounts. No one knows who changed what, or who receives critical alerts.

That's why we recommend a primary verification through a shared business account, and delegated access through the Search Console permission system. However, Google does not enforce this, and technically, nothing prevents organizational chaos.

Attention: If you physically remove the verification token from the site (HTML file, meta tag, DNS), ALL verifications become invalid simultaneously. Multiple verification only protects against the loss of access to the Google account, not against a technical error on the site.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely if you lose access to the old account?

First step: do not panic. Your data is not lost. Log in to Search Console with a new Google account, add your site, and choose a verification method that does not risk interfering with the old one (if it is still active).

The DNS TXT method is often the cleanest for an additional verification. It does not affect the HTML code of the site and can coexist with a file or meta tag verification. If you have access to Google Tag Manager and it is already installed on the site, it is even quicker.

What mistakes should you avoid when changing accounts?

Never remove the old verification token until you have confirmed that your new verification works. If you remove the meta tag of the former provider before installing yours, you will find yourself without access for a few hours (the time for validation).

Another classic mistake: creating a new verification but forgetting to reconfigure the email notification preferences. You will have access to the data, but you will not be alerted in case of a critical issue. Take 5 minutes to check the notification settings after the verification.

How can you ensure a clean transition between providers?

The most professional approach is to ask the former provider to add you as an owner through the Search Console permissions system before they leave. This way, you inherit the existing configuration (alerts, sitemaps, settings) without disruption.

If that is not possible (provider disappeared, business conflict), proceed with independent verification, but plan for a complete parameter audit to ensure everything is correctly reconfigured. These optimizations and audits can quickly become complex, especially on multilingual sites or those with several versions. If you lack internal resources or technical expertise, hiring a specialized SEO agency ensures a transition without loss of visibility or configuration errors.

  • Create a new Search Console verification with your own Google account
  • Choose the DNS TXT method or Google Tag Manager to avoid conflicts
  • Ensure that access to historical data is complete (16 months of performance)
  • Reconfigure email alerts to receive critical notifications
  • Resubmit sitemaps if necessary (even if the old ones remain active)
  • Update OAuth integrations for third-party tools (Screaming Frog, SEMrush, etc.)
Multiple Search Console verifications are a safety measure, not a governance solution. Structure your access from the start with a shared primary account (business email) and delegated permissions for external providers. This will help you avoid 90% of transition issues.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je vérifier un site avec plusieurs comptes Google simultanément ?
Oui, Google autorise explicitement plusieurs vérifications indépendantes d'un même site. Chaque compte peut utiliser sa propre méthode de vérification (fichier HTML, DNS, balise meta, Analytics, Tag Manager).
Est-ce que je perds les données historiques si je crée une nouvelle vérification ?
Non, les données sont stockées côté Google, pas dans le compte. Une nouvelle vérification donne immédiatement accès à l'intégralité de l'historique disponible (généralement 16 mois de rapports de performance).
Quelle méthode de vérification choisir pour éviter les conflits avec l'ancien compte ?
La vérification DNS TXT est la plus propre car elle n'interfère pas avec le code HTML. Google Tag Manager est aussi pratique si GTM est déjà installé sur le site.
Les sitemaps soumis par l'ancien prestataire restent-ils actifs ?
Oui, les sitemaps soumis sont liés au site, pas au compte Search Console. Vous pouvez les voir dans votre nouvelle vérification et en soumettre de nouveaux si besoin.
Dois-je supprimer l'ancienne vérification pour en créer une nouvelle ?
Non, c'est même déconseillé. Tant que l'ancien token reste sur le site, la vérification précédente reste valide. Ajoutez simplement la vôtre en parallèle pour éviter toute interruption d'accès.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO Search Console

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