Official statement
Other statements from this video 8 ▾
- 15:55 Pourquoi le test en direct de la Search Console utilise-t-il toujours Googlebot Desktop ?
- 20:16 Changer fréquemment le titre d'une page nuit-il au référencement ?
- 24:20 Le contenu court peut-il vraiment bien se positionner en SEO ?
- 29:51 Comment Google veut-il vraiment qu'on signale le contenu dupliqué à visée SEO ?
- 32:02 Google tient-il vraiment compte du SEO dans ses mises à jour d'algorithmes ?
- 61:36 Peut-on vraiment changer la thématique d'un domaine sans risquer de pénalité ?
- 64:52 Faut-il vraiment attendre qu'un algorithme passe pour optimiser son contenu ?
- 79:33 L'expérience utilisateur est-elle vraiment plus importante que l'optimisation algorithmique ?
Google states that using expired domains to manipulate rankings is discouraged. The search engine now prioritizes content relevance over domain history. Essentially, purchasing an old domain for its backlinks no longer guarantees any lasting competitive advantage.
What you need to understand
Why is Google targeting expired domains now?
Expired domains have long been a SEO manipulation strategy of choice. The principle was simple: buy a domain that has accumulated quality backlinks, redirect its juice to a new site, and enjoy an artificial PageRank boost.
This practice became industrialized with the rise of specialized marketplaces selling domains based on their link profiles. Google is responding because this technique distorts competition and degrades user experience: a historical domain about health could be redirected to an online casino.
What does it mean to 'manipulate SEO results' in this context?
Google's wording remains intentionally vague. Manipulation implies an intent to deceive, but where do you draw the line between legitimate recovery of a digital asset and exploitation?
If you buy a competitor's domain to continue their business, is that manipulation? If you redirect all the juice to a homepage with no thematic relevance, probably yes. The problem is: Google provides no objective criteria to delineate this line.
How does Google concretely detect this practice?
Several algorithmic signals come into play. A drastic change in content theme, a massive alteration in outgoing link anchors, or a pattern of suspicious 301 redirects can trigger a reassessment of the domain.
Google can also reset the history of an expired domain, effectively erasing all accumulated benefits. This reset is not systematic or documented, making the practice even riskier.
- Google now prioritizes content relevance over domain age or history
- Massive 301 redirects from expired domains without thematic continuity are detectable
- No public criteria define the boundary between legitimate use and manipulation
- A domain's history can be reset without prior notification
- Inherited backlinks lose their value if the content does not maintain thematic relevance
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Partially. For several years, it has indeed been observed that the 'expired domain effect' has eroded. Tests show increasingly random results, with purchased domains losing their positions in a matter of months.
However, some cases continue to work, especially when the buyer maintains strict thematic coherence. A tech domain recovered to publish tech content sometimes retains its authority. So, this is not an absolute rule. [To be verified]: Google does not specify whether its position applies uniformly or if exceptions exist for legitimate business recoveries.
What nuances should we consider regarding this official stance?
The statement conflates two distinct realities. On one hand, the PBNs (Private Blog Networks) built on expired domains, which are clearly spam. On the other hand, the legitimate recovery of a digital asset by a new entrepreneur.
Google does not make this distinction, creating a dangerous gray area. If you buy a bankrupt competitor's site to merge its audience with yours, you technically fall under the definition. Yet, this is a standard business operation.
What real risks do sites using this technique face?
The main danger is not a manual penalty (which is rare in this case), but a progressive algorithmic devaluation. Your rankings can plummet without confirmed manual action in Search Console.
Worse yet: financial investment. Some expired domains sell for several thousand euros based on metrics (DR, TF) that guarantee nothing anymore. You risk losing your capital without measurable returns.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should we completely abandon expired domains in SEO?
Not necessarily, but a radical change in approach is needed. The era of buying a domain solely for its backlinks is over. Now, an expired domain is only interesting if you have a coherent editorial project aligned with its history.
Specifically, evaluate the thematic relevance before link metrics. A domain about nutrition can serve as the basis for a food project, but not for a plumbing site, even if its link profile is exceptional.
How do you audit an expired domain before purchasing it?
Check its history via Wayback Machine for at least the past five years. Look for sudden changes in theme, archived spam content, or prolonged periods of inactivity that signal a possible Google reset.
Then analyze the actual quality of backlinks, not just their quantity. Links from 2008 directories or WordPress template footers offer nothing. Favor domains with contextually relevant active editorial links.
What alternatives should be prioritized to build a site's authority?
Return to the basics of link building: linkable content, digital press relations, legitimate editorial partnerships. It's longer, but infinitely more sustainable.
If you absolutely need to accelerate, invest in guest content acquisition on quality media rather than random expired domains. The ROI has significantly improved.
- Audit the complete domain history on Wayback Machine before any purchase
- Check for thematic coherence between the old and new planned content
- Manually analyze the top 50 backlinks, not just overall metrics
- Avoid domains that have changed ownership several times in a short period
- Monitor the first months after going live: traffic drop = alert signal
- Document editorial continuity to justify the recovery if needed
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je encore acheter un domaine expiré pour un projet légitime sans risque ?
Google pénalise-t-il manuellement les sites utilisant des domaines expirés ?
Les métriques type Domain Rating ou Trust Flow sont-elles encore fiables pour évaluer un domaine expiré ?
Combien de temps faut-il attendre après expiration avant de racheter un domaine sans risque ?
Que faire si j'ai déjà un réseau de domaines expirés en production ?
🎥 From the same video 8
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h15 · published on 31/10/2018
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