Official statement
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Google confirms that new TLDs (like .tech, .shop, .blog) are treated as generic and not geographical. Therefore, you can use them to target multiple countries through subdomains or subfolders configured in Search Console. In practice, a .store site can target France, Germany, and Spain simultaneously without being constrained by implicit domain geolocation.
What you need to understand
Why does Google distinguish between old and new TLDs?
For years, traditional TLDs have been divided into two camps: generic (.com, .net, .org) and geographical (.fr, .de, .uk). Geographical TLDs send an implicit country targeting signal to Google, even without Search Console configuration.
With the massive arrival of new thematic TLDs (.store, .tech, .blog, .club, etc.), Google had to clarify its position. These extensions carry no inherent geographical connotation. A .tech can just as easily host a California site as a Parisian site.
How does geotargeting work with these generic TLDs?
Geotargeting with a generic TLD relies on three combinable methods. First, manual configuration in Search Console via the international targeting setting. Second, using geolocated subdomains (fr.example.tech, de.example.tech). Third, deploying dedicated subfolders (example.tech/fr/, example.tech/de/).
Google also analyzes on-page signals: declared language in HTML, textual content, currencies, physical addresses, local backlinks. These elements strengthen targeting but do not replace an explicit Search Console configuration.
What is the practical difference between a subdomain and a subfolder for international SEO?
Subdomains are treated by Google as semi-independent entities. They benefit from a distinct crawl budget but inherit authority from the main domain less directly. Useful for autonomous marketing teams by country or differentiated technical infrastructures.
Subfolders pool the authority of the root domain and simplify technical management. The crawl budget is shared, which can pose problems on very large sites. The Search Console configuration allows for individual geographical targeting of each folder.
- New TLDs (.tech, .store, .blog) are treated as generic by Google, without implicit geographical anchoring
- Country targeting requires explicit configuration via Search Console or dedicated subdomain/subfolder structures
- On-page signals (language, currency, contact details, local backlinks) reinforce but do not replace the technical configuration
- Subdomains and subfolders offer different trade-offs between technical autonomy and authority pooling
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement match on-the-ground observations?
Yes, and this has been consistent for several years. Tests conducted on multi-country sites in .store or .tech show that Google does respect Search Console targeting. A site in .online configured for France appears in the French SERPs just like a .fr, as long as the on-page signals are aligned.
However, be cautious: user perception remains a factor. A .com still inspires more trust than a .xyz in certain sectors. Technical SEO does not fully compensate for cognitive biases regarding domain credibility. [To verify] for ultra-competitive niches where every click-through rate point counts.
What limitations does this flexibility impose in practice?
Multi-country management on a single generic TLD introduces significant technical complexity. Search Console allows targeting of only one country per root property when using subfolders. You must create separate properties for each /fr/, /de/, /es/, multiplying the interfaces to monitor.
The crawl budget becomes critical on massively internationalized sites. Google does not guarantee to distribute crawl fairly among all your language versions. A neglected subfolder may suffer from incomplete indexing. Subdomains mitigate this risk but dilute the authority of the main domain.
In which cases is this approach discouraged?
If your strategy relies on a single main market with a strong local identity, a ccTLD (.fr, .de) remains superior. The user trust signal and ranking advantage in local searches more than compensate for the lost flexibility. A .fr systematically dominates an equivalent .shop on ambiguous French queries.
For e-commerce sites with tight margins, the added technical complexity (hreflang, canonical cross-domain, multi-currency stock management) can negate the benefit of a single TLD. Some competitors with dedicated ccTLDs will benefit from a simpler and therefore more reactive infrastructure.
Practical impact and recommendations
What needs to be configured in Search Console?
Log in to Search Console and ensure that your property fully covers the entire domain. For subfolder targeting, add each language version as a distinct property (example.tech/fr/, example.tech/de/). In the settings of each property, activate international geographic targeting and select the target country.
For subdomain targeting, declare each subdomain as a separate property (fr.example.tech, de.example.tech). Apply the same country targeting settings. Ensure that crawl data is distinct between properties to avoid mixing statistics.
What technical errors block geotargeting?
Inconsistent or missing hreflang tags are the primary cause of failure. Google does not understand which version to serve to which user and may index the wrong language in the wrong SERPs. Check with Screaming Frog that each page correctly declares all its language variants, including itself.
Improperly configured canonical cross-domain tags send contradictory signals. If your French version points canonically to the English version, Google ignores your Search Console targeting. Each language version must have its own self-referencing canonical or point to the correct variant in the same language.
How to check if targeting works after deployment?
Use geolocated searches via VPN or tools like Bright Local. Check that your French pages appear in google.fr, the German ones in google.de, etc. Test with ambiguous queries (without explicit geographical terms) to see if Google accurately guesses local intent.
Monitor the Performance reports in Search Console filtered by country. A high proportion of German traffic on your French pages signals a targeting problem. Bounce rate metrics and conversion by country in Analytics confirm if users land on the correct language version.
- Configure geographic targeting in Search Console for each subdomain or subfolder property
- Implement complete and consistent hreflang tags on all internationalized pages
- Ensure that canonicals point to the correct language variant, never to inconsistent cross-domain
- Test targeting with geolocated searches using VPN or specialized tools
- Monitor Performance reports by country in Search Console for traffic leaks
- Regularly audit on-page signals (HTML language, currencies, contact details) to reinforce targeting
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un TLD .shop peut-il cibler la France sans perdre du ranking face à un .fr ?
Faut-il choisir sous-domaines ou sous-dossiers pour un site multi-pays sur un TLD générique ?
Les balises hreflang sont-elles obligatoires avec un TLD générique multi-pays ?
Peut-on migrer d'un ccTLD vers un TLD générique sans perdre du trafic ?
Google favorise-t-il certains nouveaux TLD par rapport à d'autres pour le SEO ?
🎥 From the same video 16
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 30/07/2015
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