Official statement
Other statements from this video 17 ▾
- 1:48 Pourquoi Google galère-t-il à indexer vos nouveaux contenus rapidement ?
- 2:10 Le texte d'ancrage est-il vraiment important pour le référencement ?
- 4:17 Changer de TLD impacte-t-il vraiment votre visibilité organique ?
- 8:01 Un domaine au passé douteux peut-il vraiment retrouver la confiance de Google ?
- 10:06 Le texte alt des images booste-t-il vraiment votre SEO ?
- 10:59 L'indexation mobile-first s'applique-t-elle vraiment à tous les critères de ranking, y compris above-the-fold ?
- 11:38 Google peut-il ignorer votre balisage logo pour le Knowledge Graph ?
- 13:18 Les interstitiels de sélection linguistique bloquent-ils vraiment le crawl de Google ?
- 14:20 Faut-il vraiment limiter le nombre de balises H1 et H2 sur une page ?
- 15:55 Google utilise-t-il les scores d'organismes externes pour évaluer la réputation d'un site ?
- 16:26 Peut-on réutiliser les mêmes avis clients sur plusieurs pages sans pénalité SEO ?
- 18:25 L'indexation mobile-first peut-elle enterrer vos pages produits mal liées ?
- 21:33 Peut-on vraiment paginer différemment entre mobile et desktop sans risque SEO ?
- 37:31 Les erreurs 503 peuvent-elles vraiment faire disparaître votre site de Google ?
- 38:58 Les carrousels du Knowledge Graph influencent-ils vraiment votre classement SEO ?
- 40:41 Faut-il vraiment rediriger une ancienne catégorie vers une seule des nouvelles URLs ?
- 43:12 Le contenu dupliqué interne pénalise-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
John Mueller advises against adding complex site structures for internationalization unless absolutely necessary. The reason? They fragment visibility and make maintenance a nightmare. For SEO, this means that a subdomain or subdirectory per language is only justified if your business actually operates in those markets with unique content and a consistent local strategy.
What you need to understand
What does Mueller's warning actually mean?
Google recommends architectural simplicity for multilingual or multi-regional sites. Specifically, if you are considering splitting into subdomains (fr.example.com, en.example.com) or even ccTLDs (.fr, .co.uk), first ask yourself a straightforward question: does your business justify this complexity?
Mueller points out a specific risk: dilution of the popularity signal. Each separate structure (subdomain, distinct domain) fragments your link equity. A backlink to fr.example.com does not directly boost en.example.com. You end up with multiple weak sites rather than one strong consolidated site.
When does this complexity become counterproductive?
The classic pitfall? A site that launches five language versions without a local team, without a dedicated content budget, just to
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. It is regularly observed that sites which have fragmented their international architecture struggle to rank in any market. They accumulate domains or subdomains with DA 15-20, while a monolithic competitor boasts DA 45+ and dominates.
The problem becomes even more pronounced with competitive queries. A site with subdirectories capitalizes on the overall authority of the main domain. A site split into subdomains or ccTLDs must build this authority separately, which takes years and requires colossal link acquisition budgets.
What nuances should be added to this advice?
Mueller does not say that subdomains or ccTLDs are bad in essence. He says: do not use them if you do not have the means to support your ambitions. Amazon or Booking use ccTLDs because they have local teams, massive budgets, and content and acquisition strategies differentiated by market.
You are probably not Amazon. If your annual link building budget is below €50K, fragmenting your site into five distinct structures essentially divides your resources by five. It’s mathematical.
Another nuance: some markets impose local hosting or prefer ccTLDs psychologically. China, for example. But even in this case, ask yourself: do I have a real local strategy or just a desire to be present?
When does this rule not apply?
If you are a multinational with distinct legal entities by country, local product teams, and partially different catalogs, ccTLDs or subdomains can be justified. You are effectively operating separate sites with separate budgets.
Another exception: sites that have already built strong authority on multiple historical ccTLDs. Migrating to subdirectories may be riskier than maintaining the existing setup, especially if incoming links are massive and widespread.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely if you are launching an international site?
Start with an honest resource audit. Do you have a local team in each target country? A dedicated content and link building budget per market? If not, start with a subdirectory structure (example.com/fr/, example.com/de/) with hreflang to geolocate the content.
Correctly set up Search Console with a property for each language version, even in subdirectories. This allows you to track performance by market without fragmenting domain authority. Implement hreflang rigorously, as it is your only tool to avoid cannibalization between versions.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Do not create subdomains or ccTLDs just because “it looks professional” or your CMS offers it by default. Each separate structure must correspond to a distinct operational entity with its own goals, budget, and team.
Avoid the ghost content syndrome: five language versions with 80% of identical pages simply translated. Google detects international thin content very well. If you do not have the means to provide each market with unique and regular content, focus on one or two main markets.
How can you check if your current architecture is optimal?
Analyze the internal PageRank distribution among your language versions. If you find that your subdomains or ccTLDs have very weak link profiles and struggle to rank, it is a sign that fragmentation is costing you dearly.
Compare your link acquisition speed by structure. If one version accumulates 90% of new backlinks while others stagnate, you probably have an architecture poorly suited to your actual resources.
- Conduct a resource audit (local teams, content/link budgets) before choosing the architecture
- Favor subdirectories + hreflang unless there are distinct operational entities
- Configure Search Console with separate properties to track by market without fragmenting the domain
- Implement hreflang rigorously to avoid inter-language cannibalization
- Regularly audit PageRank distribution and link acquisition by structure
- Only launch a new language version if you have a dedicated budget and team
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les sous-domaines diluent-ils vraiment l'autorité du domaine principal ?
Dans quels cas les ccTLD restent-ils recommandés ?
Hreflang suffit-il à éviter la cannibalisation entre versions linguistiques ?
Peut-on migrer d'une architecture sous-domaines vers sous-répertoires sans risque ?
Combien de versions linguistiques peut-on gérer efficacement en sous-répertoires ?
🎥 From the same video 17
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 13/11/2018
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