Official statement
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- 36:20 Pourquoi bloquer CSS et JavaScript peut tuer votre référencement mobile ?
Google asserts that a domain's age does not directly influence rankings. What matters is the reputation built up and the trust signals accumulated over time. Purchasing an old domain does not guarantee any SEO advantage unless it has developed real authority and quality backlinks.
What you need to understand
Why is domain age often misunderstood in SEO?
For years, a persistent belief has circulated: the older a domain is, the better it ranks. This confusion arises from an observed but misinterpreted correlation. High-performing old domains have generally accumulated strong trust signals (backlinks, mentions, stable content history), not merely years of existence.
What Mueller clarifies here is the difference between causation and correlation. A domain created in 2005 has no intrinsic advantage over a 2023 domain if the latter quickly develops strong topical authority. The algorithm does not refer to the WHOIS registration date to award bonus points.
What does "reputation" really mean in this context?
Reputation refers to the entirety of accumulated trust signals: profile of natural inbound links, brand mentions, positive user behavior, absence of historical penalties. A domain that has survived 10 years without dubious practices carries this history in its link profile.
But beware: acquiring an expired domain from 2008 does not automatically transfer this reputation if the new owner disrupts the thematic continuity. Google can detect a sudden change in topic or structure and may treat the site as a new entity regardless of the age of the domain name.
How does Google actually evaluate a domain's history?
The algorithm analyzes link and content history through time snapshots. A domain that has regularly published consistent content over 8 years, gradually acquired backlinks, and maintained a stable architecture sends signals of stability. It is this stability that correlates with better performance.
Conversely, a domain that has been dormant for 5 years and then abruptly reactivated loses a significant portion of its historical signals. Google looks for continuity patterns, not just a birth date. The length of continuous activity counts more than the initial registration date.
- Age alone does not provide any direct algorithmic boost in Google rankings
- Reputation is built through quality links, organic mentions, and stable content history
- Buying an expired old domain guarantees nothing if the link profile is toxic or the thematic focus changes radically
- Google can detect ownership changes and partially reset the trust granted to the domain
- A new domain can outperform an old one in a few months with an aggressive and consistent content and link building strategy
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, largely. A/B tests on new vs. old domains show that the speed of authority acquisition primarily depends on editorial strategy and link building, not the ICANN registration date. A domain launched in 2022 with a content campaign by experts and links from authoritative sites can surpass a dormant 2010 domain in 6-8 months.
However, nuance: in very competitive niches (finance, health, law), long-established domains benefit from a cumulative network effect that is difficult to catch up with quickly. Not because Google favors them for their age, but because they have accumulated hundreds of quality backlinks and brand recognition that new entrants must rebuild from scratch. [To be verified]: Google has never published quantitative data on the exact weight of history in E-E-A-T.
What misinterpretations should be avoided?
First error: believing that buying an expired domain with a historical link profile is enough. If this domain was a cooking blog in 2015 and becomes a B2B SaaS site in 2023, Google will detect the thematic inconsistency. Historical links lose their contextual relevance and may even become suspicious.
Second error: thinking that patience = results. A domain can be aging for 5 years without progressing if the content is poor and links nonexistent. Age never compensates for the lack of positive signals. Conversely, a 6-month-old domain with 50 thematically aligned DR70+ backlinks will always outperform a 10-year-old domain with 5 spam forum links.
In what cases can domain age still play an indirect role?
Real case: old branded domains with media history. If your brand has existed for 15 years with regular press mentions, Google associates this entity with established trust. It is not the technical age of the domain that matters, but the footprint of the Knowledge Graph entity associated with that domain.
Another case: dormant links reactivated. An old domain may have backlinks from sites that no longer exist or have changed, but some deep links persist in the index. These "fossils" may transmit residual juice if the thematic focus remains coherent. However, relying on this is more of a gamble than a solid strategy.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you focus on if domain age doesn't matter?
Focus on acquiring verifiable trust signals: natural editorial backlinks, brand mentions without links, measurable user engagement (session duration, repeat visits), thematic coherence between pages. These factors build a reputation much faster than passively waiting for the domain to age.
If you're launching a new site, prioritize an expert content strategy right from the start. Google can quickly trust a new domain if the authors display verifiable credentials, sources are properly cited, and backlinks come from authoritative sites in the niche. E-E-A-T largely compensates for the lack of history.
What mistakes should be avoided when purchasing an expired domain?
Never buy an expired domain without analyzing the complete Archive.org history. Check that the domain has not been used for spam, phishing, or adult content. Google retains these negative signals for a long time, even after a change of ownership.
Avoid domains with suspect link spikes in Ahrefs (e.g., +500 backlinks in 1 month followed by silence). These patterns often indicate dismantled PBNs or spam campaigns. A healthy link profile grows gradually, with organic variations, not brutal staircases.
How to properly audit a domain before acquisition?
Use Wayback Machine to check historical thematic coherence. If the domain has changed topics every 2 years, it's a red flag. Then check the link profile in Ahrefs, Majestic, and SEMrush: the three tools must show consistent data. If Ahrefs shows 1000 backlinks and Majestic 50, it's suspicious.
Also check Google Search Console if the current owner agrees to share temporary access. Historical manual actions, even lifted, leave behavioral traces in the algorithm. Finally, conduct a site:domaine.com search to see how many pages are indexed and if any ghost content persists.
- Audit the complete history via Archive.org for at least 5 years before buying an expired domain
- Check for the absence of manual or algorithmic Google penalties through the Search Console history if accessible
- Analyze the link profile in 3 different tools (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush) to detect inconsistencies
- Prefer domains with progressive organic growth of backlinks, not suspect spikes
- Maintain thematic coherence after acquisition to preserve existing trust signals
- For a new domain, invest heavily in E-E-A-T and expert content within the first 3 months
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Acheter un domaine expiré de 10 ans me donnera-t-il un avantage SEO immédiat ?
Google pénalise-t-il les nouveaux domaines par rapport aux anciens ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il le changement de propriétaire d'un domaine ?
Les liens d'un domaine ancien conservent-ils leur valeur après changement de thématique ?
Vaut-il mieux un domaine neuf avec stratégie agressive ou un ancien domaine à repositionner ?
🎥 From the same video 8
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 16/12/2014
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