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Official statement

Google collects various signals at the domain level (or overall site level) and others at the individual page level. The final ranking results from a combination of both: a good landing page on a low-quality domain will be penalized, while an average page on a strong domain will benefit from a boost.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 52:29 💬 EN 📅 14/05/2020 ✂ 39 statements
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Other statements from this video 38
  1. 1:07 Is Google automatically switching back to mobile-first after fixing asymmetry errors?
  2. 1:07 Is it true that mobile-first indexing is stuck: how long until automatic unlocking?
  3. 3:14 Does Google flag missing images on mobile: Should you ignore these alerts if your mobile version is intentionally different?
  4. 3:14 Should you really fix the missing images detected by Google on mobile?
  5. 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really improve your ranking on Google?
  6. 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really impact your page rankings?
  7. 5:17 How does Google blend site-level and page-level signals to rank your pages?
  8. 11:16 Does functional duplicate content really harm your SEO ranking?
  9. 11:52 Is Google really ignoring duplicate boilerplate content without punishment?
  10. 13:08 Do you really need multiple questions in an FAQ schema to get a rich snippet?
  11. 13:08 Should you really abandon the FAQ schema on single-question product pages?
  12. 14:14 Does schema markup really help you land featured snippets?
  13. 15:45 Do featured snippets really depend on structured markup or visible content?
  14. 18:18 Is Google penalizing CSS-hidden FAQ content in an accordion?
  15. 18:41 Does the FAQ schema really work if answers are hidden in a CSS accordion?
  16. 19:13 Should you merge two cannibalizing pages or let them coexist?
  17. 19:53 Is it really necessary to merge your competing pages to boost their rankings?
  18. 20:58 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risking your SEO?
  19. 21:36 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risk?
  20. 23:02 Does the exact order of keywords in your content really affect your Google ranking?
  21. 23:22 Does the order of keywords on a page really impact Google rankings?
  22. 27:07 Does the order of keywords in the meta description really affect CTR?
  23. 27:22 Should you really align the word order in your meta description with the target query?
  24. 29:56 Does Google really understand your synonyms better than you do?
  25. 30:29 Should you really stuff your pages with synonyms to rank on Google?
  26. 31:56 Should you create mixed pages to cover all meanings of a polysemous keyword?
  27. 34:00 Should you create specialized pages or general pages to rank effectively?
  28. 35:45 Should you optimize your site for synonyms, or does Google really handle it all by itself?
  29. 37:52 Does Google really give a 6-month notice before any major SEO changes?
  30. 39:55 Does Google really announce its major algorithm changes 6 months in advance?
  31. 43:57 Why are multilingual footer links crucial on every page?
  32. 44:37 Why do your hreflang links fail when they point to a homepage instead of an equivalent page?
  33. 44:37 Why does linking to the homepage undermine your hreflang strategy?
  34. 46:54 Subdomains or Subdirectories for Internationalization: Which Hreflang Architecture Does Google Really Favor?
  35. 47:44 Should you opt for subdirectories or subdomains for a multilingual site?
  36. 48:49 Should you add footer links to your multilingual homepages in addition to hreflang?
  37. 50:23 Does your shared IP really harm your SEO rankings?
  38. 50:53 Can shared cloud IPs really harm your SEO?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google combines signals at the domain level and at the individual page level to establish the final ranking. A perfectly optimized page on a weak site will be hindered, while an average page on a strong domain will receive a boost. Ultimately, the site's overall authority remains a ranking lever that cannot be ignored— even if on-page optimization remains essential.

What you need to understand

What signals does Google evaluate at the entire domain level?

Google considers global metrics that transcend the individual page: the domain's history, its editorial reputation, the average quality of published content, and the overall backlink profile. These signals form a sort of “trust score” assigned to the entire site.

This also includes technical criteria such as publication velocity, thematic consistency, and the frequency of manual penalties. A domain that has previously been sanctioned for spam carries this stamp in its history, even after rectification.

What does Google measure at the level of each individual page?

At the page level, the algorithm analyzes semantic relevance: alignment with search intent, writing quality, HTML structure, and the presence of enriched media. Core Web Vitals, the internal linking pointing to that specific page, and dedicated backlinks also count.

This granularity allows Google to reward an exceptional page on an average site—but only up to a certain point. The ceiling is still defined by the overall domain score.

How do these two levels of signals interact in the algorithm?

The final ranking results from a dynamically weighted balance between domain authority and page quality. A weak page on a strong site can temporarily rank due to the domain boost, but Google ultimately adjusts if the content disappoints users (bounce rate, lack of clicks).

Conversely, an excellent page on a young or less authoritative domain will take longer to break through. It will need to accumulate positive engagement signals and direct backlinks to compensate for the domain's handicap.

  • Domain authority: history, overall link profile, editorial reputation, thematic consistency
  • Page quality: semantic relevance, technical structure, dedicated backlinks, engagement signals
  • Final weighting: a non-linear combination of both levels, with adjustments based on queries
  • A strong domain can tolerate some weak pages, but an accumulation of mediocre content erodes the overall score
  • An isolated excellent page on a weak domain must prove its value through usage signals before climbing

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with field observations?

Yes, rather strikingly. We regularly see average content from major media ranking higher than more in-depth articles published on less established sites. Domain authority acts as a trust multiplier: Google gives the benefit of the doubt to historically reliable sites.

Conversely, new domains or those with a dubious link profile must prove themselves page by page. Even impeccable content will take weeks—or even months—to climb if the domain lacks overall credibility.

What gray areas remain in this explanation?

Mueller does not specify the relative weight of each signal level. Is it 50/50? 70/30 in favor of the domain? Does weighting vary by query (informational vs transactional) or industry? [To be verified]

Another ambiguity: how does Google handle subdomains or subdirectories of a main domain? Does blog.example.com inherit the score of example.com, or is it treated as a distinct entity? Observed practices suggest partial inheritance, but Google remains vague.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

For ultra-niche or long-tail queries, domain authority holds less weight: few sites reference, so page relevance takes precedence. A specialized forum or community wiki can dethrone a major media outlet if its content perfectly aligns with intent.

Conversely, YMYL queries (health, finance) amplify the domain effect: Google massively favors recognized sources. An isolated, even excellent, page will struggle to break through without a domain boasting strong E-E-A-T signals.

Attention: Never underestimate the overall authority of your domain on the pretext of fully optimizing each page. A site with a toxic link profile or a questionable history will plateau regardless—cleaning up the foundations comes first.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you improve signals at the entire domain level?

Work on editorial consistency: a site that publishes on too many dispersed subjects dilutes its thematic authority. Narrow down to a few clear pillars. Care for the overall backlink profile: prioritize quality over quantity, disavow toxic links, and gain mentions from reliable referring domains.

Maintain a regular publication cadence and update your existing content. A domain that stagnates or allows obsolete pages to rot sends a signal of decline. Google values lively, maintained sites that prove their relevance over time.

What to do at the individual page level to maximize its potential?

Optimize for search intent: each page should precisely answer a target query with a logical HTML structure (Hn tags, structured data, enriched media). Build a strategic internal link structure that distributes link juice to your priority pages—don't leave orphan URLs.

Obtain direct backlinks to your key pages, not just to the home page. A page that accumulates its own incoming links gains autonomy and partially compensates for an average domain. Monitor engagement signals (time on page, bounce rate): a page that retains users rises, even on a weak domain.

What mistakes to avoid when launching a new domain?

Do not publish dozens of mediocre pages at once to “fill” the site. Google forms its opinion on your domain from the first crawls: it’s better to have 10 solid pages than 50 poorly crafted ones. Avoid artificial link profiles (mass purchases, obvious reciprocal exchanges) that undermine authority before even starting.

Do not overlook HTTPS, speed, and mobile UX: these technical signals contribute to the domain score. A slow or poorly secured site enters with a handicap. Lastly, don't change your editorial line every three months—thematic consistency is built over time.

  • Audit the overall backlink profile of the domain and disavow toxic links
  • Narrow the editorial line around a few clear thematic pillars
  • Optimize each page for a precise search intent with Hn structure and structured data
  • Build a strategic internal link structure to your priority pages
  • Obtain direct backlinks to your key pages, not just to the home page
  • Maintain a regular publication cadence and update existing content
The balance between domain authority and page quality requires a two-level approach: building the overall site reputation over time (links, editorial consistency, maintenance) while refining each page to maximize its relevance. These cross-optimizations demand sharp technical and editorial expertise. If you lack internal resources or your domain stagnates despite your efforts, the support of a specialized SEO agency can accelerate diagnosis and unlock levers you might not have identified alone.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un nouveau domaine peut-il se positionner rapidement avec d'excellentes pages ?
Oui, mais avec un plafond initial. Les pages de qualité monteront plus vite que sur un domaine négligé, mais l'absence d'historique et de backlinks globaux freinera leur ascension face à des concurrents établis.
Les sous-domaines héritent-ils de l'autorité du domaine principal ?
Google reste flou, mais les observations suggèrent un héritage partiel. Un sous-domaine bénéficie d'une fraction de la confiance du domaine racine, mais doit aussi prouver sa propre cohérence éditoriale et son profil de liens.
Comment savoir si mon domaine souffre d'un handicap global ?
Comparez le temps de positionnement de vos pages vs concurrents à contenu équivalent. Si vos meilleures pages stagnent malgré des optimisations on-page solides, votre domaine manque probablement d'autorité ou porte un historique problématique.
Faut-il prioriser les backlinks vers la home ou vers les pages internes ?
Les deux. Les liens vers la home renforcent l'autorité globale du domaine, mais les liens directs vers vos pages clés leur donnent de l'autonomie et compensent un domaine moyen. Visez un mix stratégique.
Une pénalité manuelle ancienne affecte-t-elle encore le score domaine après levée ?
Officiellement non, mais l'historique laisse des traces dans l'algorithme. Un domaine ayant subi plusieurs sanctions mettra plus de temps à regagner la confiance de Google, même après correction complète.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 14/05/2020

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