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Official statement

After a domain migration, updating external links pointing to the old site helps Google with canonicalization. If Google hesitates between the old and new version, external links to one version help in making the right decision.
27:27
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h14 💬 EN 📅 11/12/2020 ✂ 46 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that updating external links pointing to the old domain after a migration facilitates canonicalization and accelerates the transfer of signals. When Google hesitates between the old and new version, active backlinks to either version directly influence its decision. In practical terms, the more external links point to the new domain, the quicker Google understands which version to favor.

What you need to understand

Why does Google talk about canonicalization after a migration?

A domain migration inherently creates a temporary duplication situation: the old site still exists (often redirected), the new one is live, and Google has to decide which version to index and display in results. This is exactly a canonicalization issue — choosing the "official" version among multiple URLs with identical or very similar content.

301 redirects provide a strong signal, but Google doesn’t follow them blindly. The engine collects other signals to validate that the migration is legitimate and that the new domain should replace the old one: crawl history, user behavior, and above all… backlinks. If hundreds of sites continue to point to the old domain, Google may interpret this as a signal that the old site remains the reference.

How do backlinks influence Google's decision?

External links are a vote of confidence and authority for Google. When site A points to domain X, it signals that X is the legitimate source. After a migration, if the majority of backlinks still point to old-domain.com while you have migrated to new-domain.com, Google receives contradictory signals.

The redirects say, "the new domain is the right one," but the backlinks say, "the old domain remains the reference." Faced with this ambiguity, Google may slow down the consolidation of signals (PageRank, topical authority, rankings), or even continue to display the old domain in some results for weeks.

What does this change in practice for the transfer of PageRank?

PageRank flows through links. If a backlink points to old-domain.com/page-A and redirects via 301 to new-domain.com/page-A, Google theoretically transfers most of the SEO juice. However, each redirect introduces a slight loss — and above all, it slows down the consolidation.

If you update the backlink to point directly to new-domain.com/page-A, the flow of PageRank is immediate and frictionless. Google sees a clear signal: the new domain is the legitimate destination, not a copy or a diversion attempt. Canonicalization happens faster, and rankings stabilize more quickly.

  • Migration = temporary duplication that Google must resolve through canonicalization
  • Backlinks are a legitimacy signal: they indicate which version is "official"
  • Updating backlinks eliminates ambiguity and accelerates the transfer of signals
  • 301 redirects work, but direct backlinks to the new domain are more effective
  • Objective: ensure Google quickly sees the new domain as the sole version to index

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Absolutely. SEOs managing complex migrations systematically notice: sites that update their major backlinks (partners, directories, press mentions) regain their initial positions within weeks. Those who leave everything on 301 redirects without touching backlinks often face problems for months — traffic drops, partial canonicalization, URLs from the old domain remaining indexed.

Crawl data also confirm this: Googlebot continues to crawl the old domain massively as long as active backlinks point to it. Every crawl of a redirected URL consumes budget and delays consolidation. Updating backlinks reduces this waste and refocuses the crawl on the new domain.

What nuances should be added to this recommendation?

Google says, "updating external links helps," but it doesn't specify how many or which ones. If you have 10,000 backlinks, no one expects you to manually correct all of them — that would be a Herculean and often impossible task (you don't control third-party sites). The real issue is to prioritize high-impact backlinks: strategic partners, authoritative sites, dofollow links with real traffic.

The other point Google doesn't mention: how quickly should you act? Ideally, major backlinks should be updated before or immediately after the migration, not six months later. The longer you wait, the more Google consolidates contradictory signals and the slower the correction will be. [To be verified]: Google has never communicated numerical data on the differential impact between updating 10%, 50%, or 90% of backlinks.

In which cases does this rule not fully apply?

If your migration involves a site with very few backlinks (let's say fewer than 50 external links), the impact is marginal — 301 redirects will suffice. Conversely, if you are migrating a site with tens of thousands of backlinks, you will never be able to update them all: focus on the 20% that generate 80% of the juice (classic Pareto principle).

Another edge case: HTTPS migrations (same domain, protocol change). Google treats this differently: backlinks in http:// to your site will be automatically "understood" as pointing to the https:// version, especially if you have set up HSTS. No need to chase after every link to correct it — but it remains good SEO practice to clean up the most significant ones over time.

Attention: If you have toxic or spammy backlinks pointing to the old domain, the migration is a golden opportunity to "let them die" on the old domain without disavowing them. Only update quality backlinks.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should be done concretely after a domain migration?

First step: identify your strategic backlinks. Use Google Search Console (Links tab), Ahrefs, Majestic, or Semrush to extract the complete list of referring domains. Filter by Domain Rating, referral traffic, or positioning of the source page — the goal is to spot the 50 to 200 backlinks that really matter.

Second step: contact webmasters to request updates. Prepare a clear and courteous template email, explaining the migration and providing the old and new URL. Prioritize contacting business partners, premium directories, media sites that have mentioned you, and resource pages. Follow up after 7-10 days if you don’t receive a response. You can expect a success rate of 30-60% depending on your relationships.

What mistakes to avoid during and after migration?

Number one mistake: cutting 301 redirects too soon. Even if you update your backlinks, not all will be corrected — and Google may take months to recrawl certain third-party sites. Keep redirects active for at least 12 months, ideally 24 months if the site is strategic. Otherwise, you lose SEO juice and create cascading 404s.

Number two mistake: only monitoring Google Analytics. Also monitor Search Console (error messages, coverage, canonicalization), your positions on priority keywords, and the crawl volume on the old vs. new domain. If Googlebot continues to crawl the old domain massively three months after the migration, this is a red flag: backlinks have not been sufficiently updated.

How to check that canonicalization is going well?

Use the site:old-domain.com operator in Google: if you still see hundreds of pages indexed several weeks after the migration, that's suspicious. Also check the canonical tags on the new domain (they should point to themselves, not to the old one) and test some URLs from the old domain in the Search Console URL Inspection tool.

Set up a weekly KPI tracking: organic traffic, average positions, number of pages indexed on the new domain, crawl rate. If after 4-6 weeks you don't see a clear convergence towards the new domain, it indicates that signals are still ambiguous — and you need to intensify the updating of backlinks.

  • Extract the complete list of backlinks from Search Console or an SEO tool
  • Prioritize the 50-200 high-impact backlinks (high DR, referral traffic, dofollow)
  • Contact webmasters with a clear template email to request updates
  • Keep 301 redirects active for at least 12 months
  • Monitor Search Console, positions, crawl, and indexing weekly
  • Regularly check site:old-domain.com for signs of residual indexing
Updating major backlinks after a migration is a time-consuming yet strategic task: it accelerates canonicalization, reduces crawl budget waste, and stabilizes your rankings more quickly. If your migration involves a high-stakes site or one with a complex backlink profile, these optimizations can become tricky to orchestrate alone — this is often the time to call in a specialized SEO agency to manage the transition and avoid costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je vraiment mettre à jour tous mes backlinks après une migration de domaine ?
Non, c'est irréaliste si vous en avez des milliers. Concentrez-vous sur les 50 à 200 backlinks les plus influents (DR élevé, trafic référent, dofollow) — ce sont eux qui pèsent le plus dans la canonicalisation et le transfert de PageRank.
Combien de temps faut-il garder les redirections 301 après une migration ?
Au minimum 12 mois, idéalement 24 mois. Même si vous mettez à jour vos backlinks, Google met du temps à recrawler tous les sites tiers — et tous les webmasters ne répondront pas à votre demande de mise à jour.
Les redirections 301 ne suffisent-elles pas pour transférer le jus SEO ?
Les redirections 301 transfèrent la majorité du PageRank, mais elles introduisent une légère déperdition et ralentissent la consolidation. Les backlinks directs vers le nouveau domaine éliminent cette friction et accélèrent la canonicalisation.
Comment savoir si ma migration se passe bien côté canonicalisation ?
Utilisez site:ancien-domaine.com dans Google pour vérifier que l'indexation de l'ancien site diminue. Surveillez aussi le volume de crawl de Googlebot, le trafic organique et les positions moyennes — ils doivent converger vers le nouveau domaine en 4-6 semaines.
Que faire si des backlinks toxiques pointent vers mon ancien domaine ?
La migration est une occasion parfaite de les laisser mourir sur l'ancien domaine sans les désavouer. Ne mettez à jour que les backlinks de qualité — les spammy n'ont aucune valeur et ne méritent pas votre temps.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Redirects

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 11/12/2020

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