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Official statement

The location of hosting does not affect local SEO if you use a top-level domain suitable for the country or set up geographic targeting with Google Webmaster Tools.
29:21
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h11 💬 EN 📅 16/01/2015 ✂ 13 statements
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📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that the physical location of your server does not impact your local SEO if you use an appropriate ccTLD or set up geographic targeting in Search Console. Specifically, a .fr site hosted in the United States can rank just as well in France as a site hosted in Paris. This statement simplifies technical management but requires strict GSC setup to avoid conflicting geographic signals.

What you need to understand

Why does this misconception about hosting persist?

For years, the SEO community has debated the impact of server location on local rankings. Many believed that hosting a site in France ensured better results for French geolocated queries.

This belief is based on seemingly rational logic: a nearby server improves speed, and Google uses geographic signals to customize results. However, Mueller dismantles this overly simplistic equation.

What are the actual geographic signals for Google?

Google does not rely on the server's IP to determine the geographic relevance of a site. The priority signals include the top-level domain (.fr, .de, .uk), settings in Search Console, and local mentions (address, NAP, reviews).

Hosting only affects technical performance: latency, server response time, availability. A site hosted far from its target may experience slowdowns, but this is a Core Web Vitals issue, not a geolocation one.

Does Mueller's statement change the game for multilingual sites?

For multilingual or multi-country sites, this clarification sheds light on a gray area. You can centralize the technical infrastructure on a single performant server cluster, regardless of its physical location.

What matters is a clean hreflang configuration, well-segmented ccTLDs or subdomains, and consistent Search Console targeting by language version. Hosting becomes a variable for performance optimization, not ranking.

  • The ccTLD remains the strongest geographic signal: a .fr outperforms a .com/fr/ in implicit signals.
  • The GSC targeting can correct a .com: you can inform Google that a generic domain is aimed at a specific country.
  • Hosting affects speed, not geolocation: optimize for performance, not for the IP address.
  • On-page signals take precedence: content language, currency, local contact information weigh more than the datacenter.
  • Server proximity helps indirectly: through TTFB and user experience, not as a direct ranking factor.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with real-world observations?

On paper, Mueller is correct: A/B testing of server migration generally does not show position variations if the GSC configuration and ccTLDs remain the same. Cases where a hosting change causes drops are almost always linked to collateral issues (downtime, degraded TTFB, failed redirects).

However, the reality is more nuanced for local e-commerce sites. When analyzing .com sites without ccTLD or explicit GSC targeting, the server IP can influence results by default. Google then uses hosting as a weak signal to infer the likely geographic target. This is not a ranking factor; it is a disambiguation clue.

What limitations should we place on this assertion?

Mueller simplifies intentionally, but several scenarios deserve attention. A site without ccTLD or GSC settings lets Google interpret the signals on its own: in this case, the server IP may play a minor role in refining the probable target.

Another edge case: highly competitive markets where every millisecond counts. Distant hosting degrades TTFB and LCP, indirectly impacting ranking through user experience. It is not the IP that penalizes; it is the resulting technical performance. [To verify]: no public Google data quantifies the exact weight of server latency in Core Web Vitals for local ranking.

Should we completely ignore the geography of hosting?

No, that would be an error in interpretation. Geographic hosting remains relevant for two practical reasons: legal compliance (GDPR, sensitive data) and performance optimization.

If your audience is 90% French, hosting in France reduces network latency and improves Core Web Vitals. This is not a geographic ranking signal; it is a driver for UX optimization. The distinction is subtle but critical: hosting helps through performance, not through the location itself.

Attention: If you use a CDN, the location of the origin server becomes nearly invisible to Google and users. The edge nodes distribute content locally, neutralizing the geographical effect of the main hosting.

Practical impact and recommendations

How do you correctly configure geographic targeting?

The first concrete action: audit your Search Console configuration. Go to Settings > International Targeting and ensure that each version of your site (if multilingual) points to the correct target country. A .com can be targeted to France if you specify it explicitly.

Next, make sure that your ccTLDs are consistent with your market. A site targeting Belgium should use a .be or a subdomain be.monsite.com with appropriate GSC targeting. Mixing a .fr with Belgian content sends contradictory signals that Google resolves randomly.

What technical errors might lead to a drop in local visibility?

The first common error: not setting up GSC after server migration. If you change hosts and your new IP is detected in another country, without explicit targeting, Google may temporarily hesitate over your geographic target.

The second trap: ignoring Core Web Vitals post-migration. Distant or under-sized hosting degrades TTFB and LCP. These are not geographic penalties but user experience factors that impact ranking. Monitor your PageSpeed metrics for 2-3 weeks after any hosting change.

Should you migrate your hosting if everything is already working?

Only if you identify a measurable performance issue. A TTFB over 600ms or an LCP beyond 2.5s justifies considering closer or more performant hosting. Otherwise, focus on more impactful levers: local content, geolocated backlinks, on-page optimizations.

If your current infrastructure handles the load and your Core Web Vitals are green, don't change anything. Server migration always carries risks (downtime, failed DNS configurations, redirects). The game is only worth the candle if you gain significantly in performance or cost.

  • Check the geographic targeting in Search Console for each language version
  • Use ccTLDs when possible instead of subdirectories on .com
  • Measure your TTFB before and after any hosting changes
  • Set up a CDN to neutralize the impact of server distance
  • Document your hreflang if you operate across multiple countries
  • Test Core Web Vitals from the geographic location of your target audience
Geographic hosting is not a local ranking factor if you correctly configure your ccTLDs and Search Console. Focus on server performance (TTFB, LCP) rather than IP address. These technical optimizations may require advanced skills in infrastructure and monitoring: if you manage multiple markets or your site experiences unexplained speed issues, support from a specialized SEO agency can quickly clarify priorities and avoid risky migrations.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site .com peut-il se positionner aussi bien qu'un .fr en France ?
Oui, si tu configures le ciblage géographique dans Search Console pour indiquer que ton .com vise la France. Le ccTLD reste un signal plus fort, mais un .com bien paramétré peut compenser.
Faut-il héberger en France pour un site e-commerce français ?
Ce n'est pas obligatoire pour le ranking, mais recommandé pour la performance. Un serveur français réduit le TTFB et améliore les Core Web Vitals pour une audience française, impactant indirectement le SEO.
Le CDN remplace-t-il complètement l'hébergement local ?
Presque. Un CDN distribue le contenu via des edge nodes proches des utilisateurs, masquant l'emplacement du serveur origine. Google et les visiteurs voient des temps de réponse locaux quelle que soit la localisation du datacenter principal.
Comment Google détermine-t-il la cible géographique d'un site ?
Par ordre de priorité : ccTLD, ciblage Search Console, langue du contenu, adresse physique mentionnée, backlinks locaux, et en dernier recours l'IP serveur si aucun autre signal n'est clair.
Une migration d'hébergement peut-elle causer une baisse de positions ?
Oui, mais rarement à cause de la géolocalisation. Les causes fréquentes sont le downtime prolongé, la dégradation du TTFB, des erreurs de configuration DNS, ou des redirections mal gérées. L'IP serveur seule n'explique pas les chutes.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Domain Name Local Search Search Console

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