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Official statement

During major migrations or restructurings, expect significant ranking fluctuations as Google needs to reassess the new structure of the site and its relevance.
38:36
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:08 💬 EN 📅 18/02/2020 ✂ 9 statements
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Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that any significant migration or restructuring leads to major ranking fluctuations as the engine reassesses the new architecture and its relevance. For an SEO professional, this means that a temporary drop isn't necessarily a technical failure, but rather an algorithmic adjustment phase. The challenge: anticipate this volatility and monitor the right signals to distinguish a normal recalibration from a real structural issue.

What you need to understand

Why does Google refer to 'significant' fluctuations?

When a site changes URLs, structure, or domain, Google must rebuild its understanding of the site from scratch. Each migrated URL is treated as a new entity until the engine can establish a match with the old version.

The term 'significant' is not chosen lightly — it implies that the variations can be drastic and affect entire sections of the site. Some pages may temporarily rise, while others plummet for no obvious technical reason. This apparent chaos simply reflects the real-time reassessment process.

What does it really mean to 'reassess relevance'?

Google doesn’t merely follow your 301 redirects. The engine recalculates internal PageRank, analyzes new linking signals, and checks that thematic consistency is maintained. A page that once enjoyed 50 internal links may suddenly receive only 12 — and its ranking will drop as a result.

The term 'relevance' also includes behavioral signals: if users click less on your new snippets or bounce more, Google interprets that as a signal of diminished quality. Poorly communicated restructuring can trigger a purely algorithmic negative spiral.

How long do these fluctuations last?

Google doesn’t provide any official numbers, but field observations indicate that stabilization takes between 4 and 12 weeks for a clean technical migration. If errors block crawling or if the linking structure is broken, it can extend to 6 months.

The real risk: confusing a normal reassessment with an unresolved structural issue. Waiting passively while a 404 error or a chaining redirect blocks 40% of the crawl turns an accident into a disaster.

  • Normal fluctuations: Google recalculates the weight of each URL and its relevance signals
  • Typical duration: 4 to 12 weeks for a well-executed migration, longer if there are technical errors
  • Major risk: failing to distinguish between algorithmic reassessment and genuine technical dysfunction
  • Key signal: monitor crawl budget and the curve of discovering new URLs in Search Console

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with observed practices in the field?

Yes, but it remains dangerously vague. In practice, the extent of fluctuations depends on dozens of variables: site size, quality of redirects, preservation of internal linking, management of crawl budget. Saying 'expect fluctuations' without specifying alert thresholds gives a blank check for inaction.

The successful migrations I've observed show one thing: traffic can drop by 20 to 40% for 2-3 weeks, then gradually recover if everything is clean. Beyond 6 weeks without improvement, there is almost always an undetected bug — orphaned redirects, misconfigured canonicals, or unresolved duplicate content.

What nuances should we consider in this statement?

Google talks about 'major migrations' but never defines this threshold. A 500-page site with a clear structure doesn’t experience the same shocks as an e-commerce site with 200,000 URLs and dynamic filters. [To verify]: the statement suggests that all migrations cause equivalent turbulence, which is false.

Another point: 'reassessing relevance' suggests Google starts from scratch, while off-site signals (backlinks, authority) theoretically remain attached to the old domain before being transferred. In reality, there is often a 10-15% erosion of the transferred juice, even with clean 301s. Google doesn’t admit this outright, but field data confirms it.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

Partial or progressive migrations can significantly limit fluctuations. Migrating in sections while monitoring each wave allows for real-time corrections without paralyzing the entire site. This approach is never mentioned by Google, yet it cuts the risk of disaster in half.

Similarly, a purely cosmetic redesign (same URLs, same structure, just a new template) triggers almost no fluctuations. Google talks about 'restructuring', but if the HTML skeleton and critical tags remain the same, the algorithm detects no major change. Thus, the statement conflates very different cases under a single generic warning.

Attention: If your positions do not stabilize after 8 weeks and Search Console shows a stable crawl budget, look for an unresolved technical issue — duplicate content, chaining redirects, or loss of critical internal linking.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should you take before a migration?

Map all URLs in a comprehensive file: old URL → new URL → expected HTTP code. Each line must be manually verified for strategic pages (top 20% of traffic). An Excel spreadsheet is not enough — use a crawler like Screaming Frog to cross-reference the data.

Prepare a priority redirect plan: pages generating 80% of traffic should be migrated first, with direct 301s (never chains). Set up real-time monitoring on these URLs to detect any anomalies within an hour of the switch.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid during migration?

Never block crawling via robots.txt or noindex during the transition — this is the best way to make Google think your site has disappeared. Even if you want to limit server load, let Googlebot freely access the new URLs.

Avoid changing both structure AND content simultaneously. An editorial overhaul coupled with a technical migration creates algorithmic fog: Google no longer knows if fluctuations stem from structure or content relevance. Migrate first, optimize afterward — never the other way around.

How to effectively monitor the post-migration phase?

Set up automated alerts for critical metrics: daily crawl rate, 4xx/5xx error rates, and rankings for your 50 priority keywords. A Looker Studio dashboard connected to Search Console and your rank tracking tool can help spot anomalies within 24 hours.

Analyze user behavior weekly: bounce rate by page type, session duration, and conversion rate. If these KPIs drop while traffic holds steady, it indicates that the UX has deteriorated — and Google will eventually notice through behavioral signals.

These technical optimizations require sharp expertise and professional tools. If your team lacks bandwidth or experience on this type of project, partnering with a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and reduce post-migration volatility duration.

  • Map all URLs with a professional crawler and manually verify strategic pages
  • Set up direct 301 redirects (never chains) for high-traffic pages
  • Never block crawling during the transition, even partially
  • Separate technical migration and editorial redesign over time
  • Install automatic monitoring (Search Console, rank tracking, analytics) with real-time alerts
  • Analyze weekly behavioral signals to detect UX degradations
A well-executed migration limits fluctuations to 4-6 weeks and preserves 85-90% of organic traffic. The secret: anticipate every technical detail, monitor in real-time, and never mix multiple projects simultaneously. Google's statement serves as a warning, not an excuse for prolonged declines.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps durent les fluctuations de positions après une migration de site ?
Entre 4 et 12 semaines pour une migration techniquement propre. Au-delà de 8 semaines sans amélioration, un problème technique non résolu est quasi certain — redirections cassées, contenu dupliqué, ou perte de maillage interne.
Faut-il prévenir Google avant une migration via la Search Console ?
Non, Google découvre les changements automatiquement via le crawl et les redirections 301. Soumettez simplement le nouveau sitemap XML et laissez le moteur recrawler naturellement.
Les backlinks perdent-ils de la puissance lors d'une migration de domaine ?
Oui, on observe généralement une érosion de 10 à 15 % du jus transmis, même avec des redirections 301 parfaites. Google ne le reconnaît pas officiellement, mais les données terrain le confirment systématiquement.
Peut-on migrer progressivement pour limiter les risques ?
Absolument. Migrer par sections en monitorant chaque vague permet de corriger en temps réel et divise par deux les risques de catastrophe. C'est la stratégie la plus sûre pour les gros sites.
Que faire si le trafic ne remonte pas après 6 semaines ?
Crawlez le site avec Screaming Frog pour détecter les erreurs 404, redirections en chaîne, et canonicales incohérentes. Vérifiez aussi le budget crawl dans la Search Console et comparez le maillage interne avant/après migration.
🏷 Related Topics
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