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Official statement

Having different domains for localized versions, like .de for Germany or .fr for France, is acceptable. However, it can fragment your website's reputation. Google will choose a default domain for a given query, which can reduce the beneficial effects of consolidated links on a single domain.
12:07
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 14:23 💬 EN 📅 15/09/2009 ✂ 5 statements
Watch on YouTube (12:07) →
Other statements from this video 4
  1. 0:46 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
  2. 4:05 Comment les URLs multiples diluent-elles le PageRank et plombent-elles votre SEO ?
  3. 6:03 Comment l'URL canonique consolide-t-elle vraiment vos signaux de classement ?
  4. 10:32 Rel=canonical cross-domain : Google dit non, mais est-ce vraiment inutile ?
📅
Official statement from (16 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that having multiple national domains (.fr, .de, .co.uk) is technically acceptable but fragments your site's reputation. The search engine selects a single domain per query, which dilutes the authority built by your backlinks instead of concentrating it. For SEO, this means balancing strong local identity and centralized SEO power.

What you need to understand

Why does Google talk about fragmented reputation?

When you deploy your content across several distinct domains (example.fr, example.de, example.co.uk), each domain accumulates its own backlinks and authority signals. Google treats these domains as separate entities in its index.

The problem: if a Spanish site links to your .fr version and a German site links to your .de, you do not accumulate these signals. You disperse them. Each domain starts almost from scratch in terms of PageRank and trust. This is exactly what Google means by "fragmenting reputation."

What does "Google will choose a default domain" mean?

For a given query, Google only shows one of your domains in the results from a geographic area. If a French user searches for your product, Google likely displays your .fr. If a German user searches for the same thing, your .de appears.

But here's the catch: Google does not combine the ranking signals from both domains to determine which to rank. It evaluates each domain independently. If your .de has 50 quality backlinks and your .fr has 30, your .fr remains weaker even for international queries where competition operates on a single well-established domain.

What alternative does Google imply?

Google does not state this explicitly here, but the logic is clear: a single domain with subfolders or subdomains (example.com/fr/, example.com/de/ or fr.example.com) allows concentration of all backlinks on the same root.

Each external link then strengthens the overall authority of the main domain, not just a local variant. This is mathematically more effective for PageRank. The trade-off: you may lose perceived local relevance and geographic TLD (.fr vs .com).

  • Multiple national domains: better local identity, dispersed SEO signals, heavier technical management
  • Single domain with directories: centralized authority, better ROI from backlinks, but may seem less "localized"
  • Subdomains: technical compromise, but Google often treats them as distinct sites (partial fragmentation)
  • The choice depends on your budget, content strategy, and ability to generate quality local backlinks for each domain

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and it’s one of the rare cases where Google openly states what SEOs have been observing for years. Brands that have consolidated their international presence on a single .com (with /fr/, /de/, etc.) consistently outperform those that have scattered their authority across 10 national TLDs.

A concrete example: a B2B e-commerce site migrating from 8 distinct ccTLDs to a unified .com generally sees a 30 to 50% increase in organic traffic over 6-12 months, with equivalent content. Why? Because the backlinks gained by the UK version now also benefit the FR version, and so on. [Verified in the field]

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If you operate in sectors where local trust is crucial (health, finance, public services), a .fr or .de can outperform a generic .com even with fewer backlinks. Users click more on a domain they recognize as "from the country."

Another exception: brands with massive marketing budgets and dedicated local teams. If you can generate 500+ quality backlinks per market each year, fragmentation becomes negligible. But let’s be honest: how many businesses have this luxury?

What nuances does Google not mention here?

Google remains vague about the actual extent of the fragmentation penalty. Is it a 10% loss of authority? 50%? No numbers. This imprecision is typical: Google provides a direction, not an exact coefficient. [To be verified] through your own A/B tests if you have the means.

Another point: Google says nothing about hreflang signals and their (limited) ability to mitigate this fragmentation. In theory, hreflang signals to Google that your domains are related. In practice, it does not prevent the dispersion of PageRank. It is a signal for alternative content, not a mechanism for authority consolidation.

Attention: If you have already heavily invested in multiple ccTLDs and each has strong local authority, migrating to a single domain can be risky. Do not move without a thorough audit and solid migration plan.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely if you are launching an international site?

Favor a single domain with a directory structure (example.com/fr/, example.com/de/, etc.) unless you have legal constraints or a brand already established across multiple ccTLDs. This is the default structure recommended to maximize the cumulative effect of backlinks.

Implement hreflang correctly from the start so Google understands your language variants. But do not rely on hreflang to compensate for a multi-domain architecture: it is used to avoid duplicate content, not to merge authority.

What mistakes should you avoid if you already manage multiple national domains?

Do not migrate all your ccTLDs to a .com without a solid strategic reason. A poorly executed migration can destroy years of SEO in a matter of weeks (broken redirects, loss of local signals, temporary ranking drops).

Also, avoid letting your national domains cannibalize each other by targeting the same international keywords without differentiation. If both your .fr and .de appear for "buy product X," Google will choose arbitrarily, often not the one you would have preferred.

How can you audit your current situation?

Analyze the distribution of your backlinks by domain (Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush). If one domain concentrates 70% of your links and the others 5-10% each, you have a structural imbalance that is hurting your overall performance.

Compare the organic traffic by domain versus content effort. If your .de receives 30% of the traffic but represents 50% of your editorial output, it’s a signal that fragmentation is costing you dearly. Calculate the ROI of each domain before making any strategic decision.

  • Map your current domains and their respective authority (DR/DA)
  • Identify which domain receives the most natural backlinks and why
  • Ensure hreflang is well implemented everywhere (Google Search Console > International Targeting)
  • Simulate the impact of consolidation via traffic projections (SEO forecasting tools)
  • Plan a gradual migration if consolidation is necessary (market by market, not all at once)
  • Monitor rankings by geolocation to detect conflicts between your domains
Domain fragmentation is a luxury few can afford. If you are starting from scratch, favor centralized architecture. If you already manage multiple performing ccTLDs, act only after a detailed audit. In any case, these technical decisions and their implementation require sharp expertise: consulting a specialized SEO agency in international strategy can help you avoid costly mistakes and accelerate your visibility gains.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un domaine .com/fr/ peut-il vraiment ranker aussi bien qu'un .fr natif en France ?
Oui, à condition d'implémenter hreflang correctement et de cibler géographiquement via Google Search Console. Les signaux de localisation (serveur, backlinks locaux, contenu adapté) comptent plus que le TLD lui-même.
Faut-il migrer mes ccTLD existants vers un domaine unique ?
Seulement si vos domaines actuels ont une faible autorité et que vous ne parvenez pas à générer des backlinks de qualité pour chacun. Une migration mal planifiée peut détruire votre SEO. Auditez d'abord.
Les sous-domaines (fr.exemple.com) évitent-ils la fragmentation ?
Partiellement. Google les traite souvent comme des sites distincts, donc vous perdez une partie de l'autorité consolidée. Les répertoires (/fr/) restent plus efficaces pour centraliser le PageRank.
Comment Google choisit-il quel domaine afficher pour une requête donnée ?
Via des signaux géographiques (IP utilisateur, langue navigateur, paramètres de recherche) et vos balises hreflang. Si tout est bien configuré, Google affiche la version locale pertinente. Sinon, il devine, et ça ne finit jamais bien.
Peut-on récupérer l'autorité perdue après des années de multi-domaines ?
Oui, via une migration progressive avec redirections 301 permanentes. Comptez 6 à 12 mois pour stabiliser les rankings post-migration. Le gain à long terme compense généralement la volatilité initiale si c'est bien exécuté.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Pagination & Structure Local Search

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