Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 3:03 Les erreurs 404 temporaires lors d'une migration tuent-elles vraiment votre référencement ?
- 4:56 Googlebot crawle depuis les USA : comment éviter le piège du cloaking géo-IP ?
- 8:42 Peut-on vraiment bloquer Googlebot état par état aux USA sans tout casser ?
- 11:31 Pourquoi Google n'indexe-t-il pas toutes vos pages malgré un crawl actif ?
- 12:17 Les liens nofollow de Reddit sont-ils vraiment inutiles pour le SEO ?
- 14:14 Faut-il systématiquement activer loading='lazy' sur toutes vos images pour booster le SEO ?
- 15:25 Faut-il vraiment réduire le nombre de versions linguistiques pour hreflang ?
- 18:27 Faut-il vraiment corriger toutes les erreurs 404 remontées dans Search Console ?
- 20:47 Les jump links sont-ils vraiment inutiles pour le crawl de Google ?
- 21:55 Faut-il désavouer les backlinks fantômes visibles uniquement dans Search Console ?
- 23:20 Pourquoi le fichier Disavow ne masque-t-il pas les mauvais liens dans Search Console ?
- 29:18 Faut-il vraiment contextualiser l'attribut alt au-delà de la description visuelle ?
- 32:47 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter des redirections 301 et pages 404 multiples ?
- 33:02 Google déclasse-t-il algorithmiquement certains secteurs en période de crise sanitaire ?
- 36:28 Faut-il vraiment rendre toutes les images de recettes indexables pour performer en SEO ?
- 37:49 Faut-il encoder les caractères non-ASCII dans les URLs de sitemap XML ?
- 38:15 Hreflang garantit-il vraiment le bon ciblage géographique de votre trafic international ?
- 41:05 Pourquoi Google indexe-t-il une seule version quand vos pages pays sont quasi-identiques ?
- 45:51 Faut-il créer du contenu différent pour indexer plusieurs variantes d'un même service ?
- 46:27 Faut-il créer une nouvelle page ou modifier l'existante pour un changement temporaire ?
- 49:01 Faut-il vraiment éviter les balises title et meta description multiples sur une même page ?
- 52:13 Les erreurs 500/503 de quelques heures sont-elles vraiment invisibles pour votre indexation ?
Google confirms that using distinct domains by country (brand.se, example.fr) is a valid strategy for a multilingual site, as long as hreflang is properly implemented. Each domain will be treated as a separate site with its own crawl budget and authority. Beware: this approach multiplies technical complexity and can potentially dilute SEO power, unlike a single domain with subdirectories.
What you need to understand
Why was this statement necessary?
Many SEOs were wondering whether Google penalized the use of distinct domains for the language versions of a site. The concern was that the engine would consider this architecture as duplicate content or an attempt at manipulation.
Mueller clarifies here that this approach is perfectly acceptable. As long as hreflang is properly configured, Google will understand the relationship between these domains and treat them as variants of the same editorial project — but technically as separate sites.
What does "treated as separate sites" mean in practice?
Each domain will have its own crawl budget, its own domain authority, and its own backlink profile. Google will not automatically aggregate the trust signals from one domain to another.
In other words: brand.se and example.fr are two distinct entities in the eyes of the algorithm. If brand.se accumulates 500 quality backlinks, example.fr will not receive any direct transfer of that authority — unlike a subdirectory structure where example.com/fr/ would benefit from the overall domain authority.
What role does hreflang play in this configuration?
Hreflang is solely used to avoid duplicate content and to guide users to the correct language version in the SERPs. It does not transfer PageRank, nor does it pool authority.
Its implementation becomes critical: an error in the reciprocity of tags or a failure to self-reference can lead Google to no longer understand the relationship between your domains — resulting in indexed duplicate content or cannibalized language versions.
- Multiple domains = separate sites: each ccTLD has its own crawl budget and its own authority
- Hreflang is mandatory to signal the relationship between these distinct domains
- No automatic transfer of authority: backlinks from one domain do not benefit the others
- Native geolocation: a .fr is automatically associated with France, a .se with Sweden
- Multiplied technical complexity: each domain requires its own tracking, analytics, and Search Console
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed field practices?
Yes, absolutely. Multilingual sites on separate domains (Amazon.fr, Amazon.de, Amazon.co.uk) have been functioning very well for years. Google has never penalized this architecture as such.
The problem is that Mueller does not specify any complexity threshold beyond which this strategy becomes counterproductive. For a site with 3-4 countries and a few hundred pages, it is manageable. But for 15 language versions and tens of thousands of URLs? [To be verified] whether the ROI truly justifies the technical and SEO investment compared to a centralized structure.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
Mueller says it's "acceptable," not that it's "optimal." There is a fairly broad consensus in the SEO community that a subdirectory architecture (example.com/fr/, example.com/se/) is more effective for pooling authority and simplifying management.
ccTLDs provide a strong geographical advantage — a .fr will rank better in France than a .com/fr/ — but at the cost of diluting overall power. If your brand does not yet have established authority, spreading your efforts across 5 distinct domains will significantly slow your rise.
In what cases is this architecture truly relevant?
Three scenarios genuinely justify the use of separate domains: 1) you operate in countries with distinct regulations that impose local hosting and a national domain; 2) your brand is well established enough to invest in an aggressive local SEO strategy country by country; 3) you have radically different content according to markets, not just translations.
For everything else — a small business expanding internationally, an e-commerce site testing 3-4 new markets — the subdirectory or subdomain architecture remains much more pragmatic. You concentrate your authority, simplify hreflang, and drastically reduce technical complexity.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you choose separate domains?
First, configure hreflang impeccably. Each page must point to all its language variants, including itself (self-referencing). Use either HTML tags in the
or the XML sitemap — but not a mix of both to avoid conflicts.Next, be prepared to conduct separate link-building campaigns for each domain. A backlink to brand.se will not boost example.fr. You must build each ccTLD's authority independently, which multiplies the budget and time required.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not launch 5 domains at the same time if you do not have the resources to properly feed them. A domain with little content and few backlinks will take months to rank — and you cannot rely on the authority of others to speed up the process.
Also avoid blindly duplicating content from one domain to another via simple automatic translation. Google treats these sites as separate, indeed, but if the content is poorly differentiated, you risk diluting your efforts without real gain. Tailor the content to local specifics, local queries, and search intent unique to each market.
How can you check that your configuration is working correctly?
Use the Search Console of each domain to verify that hreflang is properly detected and that there are no errors. Google will indicate missing tags, broken reciprocities, or conflicts between versions.
Also launch a crawl with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl across all your domains to check that each URL has its hreflang annotations and that internal links do not create loops or unnecessary redirects between language versions.
- Implement hreflang with self-referencing on 100% of translated pages
- Check the reciprocity of tags between all domains via Search Console
- Set up a separate Search Console and Analytics for each domain
- Plan a dedicated link-building budget for each ccTLD
- Regularly audit hreflang errors and orphan pages
- Tailor content to local specifics, not just translate
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Hreflang transfère-t-il du PageRank entre domaines distincts ?
Un ccTLD comme .fr ou .de améliore-t-il automatiquement le ranking local ?
Peut-on mélanger domaines séparés et sous-répertoires dans une même stratégie multilingue ?
Faut-il héberger chaque domaine dans son pays respectif ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'un nouveau ccTLD commence à ranker ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 15/05/2020
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