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Official statement

Generic domain extensions, like .xyz or .site, are treated the same as .com by Google. You can set geolocation in Search Console to target specific users.
45:39
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h05 💬 EN 📅 13/01/2017 ✂ 12 statements
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📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to treat all generic top-level domains (gTLDs) the same: .xyz or .site carry the same SEO weight as .com. The algorithm does not favor or penalize any extension. Geolocation settings remain configurable in Search Console, independent of the chosen TLD, enabling the targeting of local audiences even with a .com.

What you need to understand

Does Google really make a difference between .com and .xyz?

The official answer is no. All generic gTLDs are treated algorithmically the same by the search engine. This means that a site with .xyz, .online, .tech, or .site does not have any disadvantage compared to a traditional .com. The TLD itself is not a ranking factor.

This position from Google has remained consistent since the massive introduction of new gTLDs. The algorithm evaluates content, authority, and technique, not the extension. The .com simply benefits from better user recall and historical trust capital, but this does not stem from pure algorithmic factors.

How can you manage geolocation without a ccTLD?

Google allows you to set geographical targeting in Search Console, even with a gTLD. Do you choose .com, but want to rank in France? Set up the French targeting in the console. This feature compensates for the lack of a natural geographical indicator in the extension.

Be aware: this option is only available for gTLDs. A .fr cannot be geolocated anywhere other than France, and a French geolocated .com will never be as strong as a .fr native for local queries. The signal remains weaker than a ccTLD.

Why does .com remain dominant despite this algorithmic neutrality?

User behavior plays a major role in SEO, and the .com enjoys a higher organic click-through rate in SERPs. Users associate .com with credibility and seriousness, especially in sensitive sectors (finance, health, legal). This perceptual bias indirectly impacts SEO through behavioral signals.

Google measures organic CTR, time spent on the site, and bounce rate. If a .xyz performs poorly on these metrics due to a trust deficit, it will be indirectly penalized. The algorithm does not discriminate based on TLD, but it penalizes the poor user metrics that result from it.

  • All gTLDs are treated equally by Google's ranking algorithm
  • Geographical targeting can be set in Search Console for generic gTLDs
  • ccTLDs (.fr, .de) remain more effective for local SEO than a manually geolocated gTLD
  • User behavior can create an indirect disadvantage for extensions perceived as less credible
  • .com retains a psychological and memory advantage outside of the algorithm

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement reflect the reality on the ground?

Yes and no. From a purely algorithmic perspective, Google is telling the truth: there is no direct boost or penalty based on the TLD. Tests of mirror sites on different extensions show similar performance with identical content and link profiles. The engine does not inject a positive or negative coefficient based on the suffix.

Where it gets tricky: SEO is not limited to the algorithm. A site with .xyz will statistically struggle more to gain natural backlinks, especially from authoritative sources. Webmasters hesitate, as do journalists. This deficit in link profile creates a real, indirect but measurable handicap. [To verify] in your sector: compare the link profiles of .com vs. exotic extensions in your niche.

What use cases justify an alternative gTLD?

Branded brands can afford a .tech, .io, or .ai if it strengthens their identity (tech startups, SaaS, crypto). The brand-extension consistency compensates for the initial trust deficit. Google.xyz or Amazon.tech? No. MaSaaS.io for a developer app? Yes, that works.

For a generic content site, a traditional e-commerce site, or a small business showcase site, .com remains the safest choice. The effort-to-benefit ratio does not justify testing an exotic TLD. You will have to work twice as hard on trust, backlinks, and conversions. The game isn't worth the candle unless you have a very specific branding strategy.

Does Search Console settings really compensate for a ccTLD?

No. Geolocating a .com in France in GSC will never replace a native .fr for ranking on highly competitive local queries. The ccTLD remains a strong geographical signal, integrated from the crawl, instantly recognized by the algorithm and users.

GSC settings work for secondary markets or testing, not for an aggressive local SEO strategy. If your business is 100% France with high competition, a .fr is non-negotiable. The geolocated .com is suitable for international brands that want a France signal without multiplying domains. A crucial nuance.

Practical impact and recommendations

Should you change your extension if you are already on an alternative gTLD?

No, unless you see a measurable business handicap. Changing a domain is expensive in SEO: temporary loss of rankings, risk of technical bugs, dilution of history. If your .xyz or .site performs well, leave it alone. Focus on content and backlinks.

Change only if: abnormally high bounce rate, recurring difficulty obtaining links, loss of conversions attributable to a trust deficit. First, test with A/B testing on landing pages, analyze user verbatims, quantify the real impact before triggering a domain migration.

How to optimize a site on an alternative gTLD to compensate for perceptual bias?

Overemphasize trust signals: visible SSL certificate, impeccable legal notices and terms of service pages, active social media presence, customer reviews on home, security labels. Everything that reassures must be pushed to the max. The logo, design, and editorial quality must make up for the extension deficit.

On the backlinks side, prioritize quality over quantity even more than usual. A link from a mainstream media outlet or a .edu/.gov site boosts your perceived credibility. Work on press relations, institutional partnerships, mentions in academic studies. Each authoritative backlink helps to mitigate the TLD bias.

What extension strategy for a new project?

For a public project, e-commerce, general content: .com is the absolute priority. If unavailable, .fr (France), .de (Germany), .co.uk (UK) based on your primary market. Forget about exotic gTLDs unless your branding absolutely requires it.

For a tech startup, B2B SaaS, developer product: .io, .ai, .tech are acceptable if the exact domain name in .com is squatted at a high price. Your target audience knows these extensions and does not view them negatively. But be prepared to invest more in branding and press relations to build trust.

  • Check your user metrics (organic CTR, bounce rate, time on site) to detect a bias related to the TLD
  • Set geographic targeting in Search Console if you are using a gTLD for a local market
  • Strengthen all on-site trust signals (SSL, legal notices, reviews, labels) if you are using an uncommon extension
  • Prioritize backlinks from authoritative mainstream sources to mitigate perceptual deficit
  • Only migrate domains if you measure a real business impact, not just on intuition
  • Always prefer .com or ccTLD for a general project without specific branding strategy
The choice of TLD remains strategic even if Google claims algorithmic neutrality. The indirect impact via user behavior and backlink acquisition may justify an investment in a premium .com. These domain/branding/SEO trade-offs require a detailed analysis of your market and competitive positioning. If you are launching an ambitious project or considering a migration, the support of a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and optimize your domain strategy from the start.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site en .xyz peut-il ranker aussi bien qu'un .com sur Google ?
Oui, algorithmiquement parlant. Google traite tous les gTLD de façon identique. En revanche, le comportement utilisateur (CTR, taux de rebond) et l'acquisition de backlinks peuvent être défavorables au .xyz, créant un handicap indirect.
Dois-je utiliser un ccTLD (.fr, .de) pour du SEO local ou puis-je géolocaliser un .com ?
Le ccTLD reste supérieur pour le SEO local car il envoie un signal géographique fort dès le crawl. La géolocalisation GSC d'un .com fonctionne mais reste un signal plus faible, acceptable pour des marchés secondaires.
Le .com a-t-il un avantage SEO direct dans l'algorithme de Google ?
Non. Google ne favorise aucune extension. L'avantage du .com est psychologique et comportemental : meilleure mémorisation, confiance accrue, CTR organique supérieur, backlinks plus faciles à obtenir.
Peut-on changer d'extension de domaine sans perdre son SEO ?
Une migration de domaine bien exécutée (redirections 301, changement d'adresse GSC, mise à jour des backlinks) limite la casse, mais une perte temporaire de rankings est quasi inévitable. Ne migrez que si le bénéfice business justifie le risque.
Les nouvelles extensions comme .ai ou .io sont-elles pénalisées par Google ?
Non, elles ne sont pas pénalisées algorithmiquement. Elles peuvent même renforcer le branding pour des startups tech. Leur principal risque est un déficit de confiance perçue dans certains secteurs (finance, santé) et une acquisition de backlinks plus difficile.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name Local Search Search Console International SEO

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