What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

When a site is redirected to a new domain via a 301 redirect, it is advisable to also transfer the disavow file from the original domain to the new domain to ensure that disavowed links are correctly taken into account.
1:35
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:18 💬 EN 📅 02/12/2014 ✂ 12 statements
Watch on YouTube (1:35) →
Other statements from this video 11
  1. 2:46 Faut-il annoter son fichier de désaveu pour que Google en tienne compte ?
  2. 6:48 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il autant sur le crawl du CSS et du JavaScript ?
  3. 12:28 Le contenu caché tue-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
  4. 15:24 Le contenu mobile équivalent au desktop suffit-il vraiment pour bien ranker ?
  5. 17:56 Le défilement infini tue-t-il vraiment l'exploration de vos pages par Google ?
  6. 33:20 Les nouveaux TLD (.company, .io, .tech…) sont-ils vraiment traités comme les .com par Google ?
  7. 36:15 Faut-il vraiment publier des centaines de pages pour bien se positionner ?
  8. 40:01 Penguin se déploie progressivement : faut-il attendre la fin de la mise à jour pour agir ?
  9. 44:02 Comment Google choisit-il quelle version de contenu dupliquer afficher dans ses résultats ?
  10. 67:20 Les URL dynamiques sont-elles vraiment un problème pour l'indexation Google ?
  11. 73:40 Les données structurées améliorent-elles vraiment le classement de votre site ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google officially recommends transferring the disavow file from an old domain to the new one during a 301 redirect. This statement confirms that disavowed links do not automatically follow the target domain despite the redirect. Essentially, if you’ve spent months cleaning up your link profile using a disavow file, your efforts will not be wasted only if you manually transfer it to the new domain via Search Console.

What you need to understand

Why doesn't the disavow file automatically follow redirects?

Google treats disavow files as domain-specific instructions, not as metadata that automatically migrates with 301 redirects. This technical logic can be surprising since other signals such as domain authority and part of PageRank do transfer well during migration.

The main reason lies in the architecture of Search Console. Each property is treated as a distinct entity. A disavow file uploaded for domain-A.com remains exclusively associated with that property, even if you redirect everything to domain-B.com.

What happens if you forget this transfer?

The toxic links you carefully disavowed on the old domain become active from Google’s perspective once the migration is complete. The search engine does not connect your two Search Console properties, even with perfectly configured 301 redirects.

You end up with a backlink profile that potentially includes spam links, over-optimized anchors, or artificial link networks that you had neutralized. The risk of manual or algorithmic penalties rises mechanically.

How does Google handle the transition of signals during a redirect?

Google gradually transfers several signals from a redirected domain to the target domain: authority, content history, quality signals. But this transfer is neither instantaneous nor 100% complete. Certain elements, such as manual penalties, may follow, while others, like disavows, do not follow by default.

This asymmetry creates situations where a site can inherit the negative aspects of an old domain without benefiting from the protection the disavow file provided. Hence, it's crucial to treat this step as a critical migration task, just like redirects or property verification.

  • The disavow file is linked to a Search Console property, not to a domain itself
  • 301 redirects transfer signals but not disavow instructions
  • A forgotten transfer potentially reactivates toxic links you had neutralized
  • The migration of the disavow should be part of your standard migration checklist
  • No automatic mechanism manages this transfer for you

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, and it's even a welcome confirmation of a practice that experienced SEOs have been applying for years. Cases of migrations where the disavow file was not transferred consistently show a resurgence of problematic links in backlink reports, sometimes accompanied by an unexplained drop in rankings a few weeks after migration.

What's interesting is that Google is finally publicly formalizing what has previously been based on empirical observation. Many practitioners had deduced this necessity through observation, but the lack of official documentation created uncertainty. Mueller clarifies this ambiguity by explicitly confirming the need for a manual transfer.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

The timing of the transfer remains unclear in Mueller's statement. Should the new disavow file be uploaded before setting up redirects, during, or after? Real-world experience suggests doing it as early as possible, ideally as soon as the new Search Console property is verified, but before the redirects begin transferring link juice en masse. [To be verified]

Another point: Mueller talks about "ensuring" correct consideration, but does not mention processing times. A disavow file can take several weeks to be fully integrated by Google. If you migrate without anticipating this delay, you create a vulnerability window where toxic links are active on the new domain.

In what cases does this recommendation not apply?

If you have never used a disavow file on the old domain, this step obviously becomes irrelevant. But be careful: this might be the right time to check if your link profile needs a clean-up before migration.

Some practitioners argue that disavowing has become less critical with improvements in Google Penguin working in real-time. This is partially true: the algorithm now automatically ignores many spam links. However, for edge cases or manual penalties, disavow still remains an essential defensive tool. Neglecting its transfer during a migration poses unnecessary risks.

Warning: If your old domain had a manual penalty related to links, ensure that this penalty has not been lifted before migrating. Transferring the disavow will not protect you from a penalty that could follow the domain via redirects.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do during a domain migration?

First step: download the disavow file from your old domain via Search Console before even starting the technical migration. This file can be found in the "Links" section, then "Disavow Links." Keep a local backup copy, dated and archived.

Then, as soon as your new domain is added and verified in Search Console, upload this disavow file to the new property. Don’t wait for the redirects to be in place or for the traffic to switch. The sooner you anticipate, the less you create a vulnerability window during which toxic links could impact the new domain.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

The most common mistake is assuming that Google will automatically link the two domains. Even with perfect 301 redirects and an address change setting in Search Console, the disavow file does not migrate. It is a 100% manual process that has no exceptions.

Another classic pitfall: uploading an incomplete or outdated disavow file. Use the migration as an opportunity to audit your disavow list. Some domains you blacklisted three years ago may no longer exist, while new spam links may have appeared in the meantime. Update your file before transferring it.

How can you check that the transfer worked?

Once the disavow file is uploaded to the new domain, monitor the link report in Search Console for 4 to 6 weeks following the migration. Disavowed links should gradually disappear from the incoming link statistics, or at the very least, be marked as ignored by Google.

Cross-check this verification with a third-party tool like Ahrefs or Majestic to identify any toxic links that might reappear despite the disavow. If you notice that links you thought you had neutralized are still affecting your profile, verify that the file has been uploaded in the correct format and that the syntax is right.

  • Download the disavow file from the old domain before any technical actions
  • Create and verify the new Search Console property as soon as possible
  • Upload the disavow file to the new domain without waiting for the traffic to switch
  • Audit and update the list of disavowed links before transfer
  • Document the date and time of the transfer in your migration plan
  • Monitor the link report for 6 weeks post-migration to validate the consideration
Transferring the disavow file during a migration is a critical technical step that requires precise coordination between timing, property verification, and post-migration monitoring. For complex migrations involving hundreds of redirects, historical penalties, or degraded link profiles, the assistance of a specialized SEO agency can be wise. These experts have the tools and experience to audit your link profile thoroughly, optimize your disavow file, and orchestrate a migration that preserves your SEO gains while neutralizing risks associated with toxic backlinks.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le fichier disavow suit-il automatiquement une redirection 301 ?
Non, absolument pas. Le fichier disavow reste attaché à la propriété Search Console de l'ancien domaine. Vous devez manuellement le télécharger puis l'uploader sur la nouvelle propriété pour que les liens désavoués soient pris en compte sur le nouveau domaine.
Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour traiter un fichier disavow transféré ?
Le délai de traitement varie généralement entre 2 et 6 semaines. Google doit recrawler les pages contenant les liens désavoués et mettre à jour son index. Pendant cette période, les liens toxiques peuvent encore exercer une influence sur votre profil.
Dois-je mettre à jour mon fichier disavow avant de le transférer ?
Oui, c'est fortement recommandé. Profitez de la migration pour auditer votre profil de liens actuel, supprimer les désaveux devenus obsolètes et ajouter les nouveaux liens toxiques apparus depuis votre dernier upload.
Que se passe-t-il si j'oublie de transférer le fichier disavow ?
Les liens que vous aviez désavoués sur l'ancien domaine redeviennent actifs du point de vue de Google sur le nouveau domaine. Vous vous exposez de nouveau aux risques de pénalités algorithmiques ou manuelles liées à ces backlinks toxiques.
Le paramètre de changement d'adresse dans Search Console transfère-t-il le disavow ?
Non. Le paramètre de changement d'adresse aide Google à comprendre la migration et à transférer certains signaux, mais le fichier disavow ne fait pas partie des éléments migrés automatiquement. Le transfert manuel reste obligatoire.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name PDF & Files Redirects

🎥 From the same video 11

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 02/12/2014

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.