Old domain still being crawled despite 301s to new domain
-
Hi there,
We switched from the domain X.com to Y.com in late 2013 and for the most part, the transition was successful. We were able to 301 most of our content over without too much trouble.
But when when I do a site:X.com in Google, I still see about 6240 URLs of X listed. But if you click on a link, you get 301d to Y. Maybe Google has not re-crawled those X pages to know of the 301 to Y, right? The home page of X.com is shown in the site:X.com results. But if I look at the cached version, the cached description will say :This is Google's cache of Y.com. It is a snapshot of the page as it appeared on July 31, 2014."
So, Google has freshly crawled the page. It does know of the 301 to Y and is showing that page's content. But the X.com home page still shows up on site:X.com. How is the domain for X showing rather than Y when even Google's cache is showing the page content and URL for Y?
There are some other similar examples. For instance, you would see a deep URL for X, but just looking at the <title>in the SERP, you can see it has crawled the Y equivalent. Clicking on the link gives you a 301 to the Y equivalent. The cached version of the deep URL to X also shows the content of Y.</p> <p>Any suggestions on how to fix this or if it's a problem. I'm concerned that some SEO equity is still being sequestered in the old domain.</p> <p>Thanks,</p> <p>Stephen</p></title>
-
Hey Stephen,
Did you ever solve this? I'm experiencing the exact same issues you've described above, so I'm curious if you ever figured it out.
Thanks.
-
If using a PHP CMS you will have a page # eg ?P123 this will make it so you can collect all of the old pages and have them redirect to the new ones perfectly.
Turn off all catching frist
A close friend of mine and I did this on his site which is quite large he got 30,000 URLs that were not pointing from his old domain to his new domain simply by adding the code below. If running WordPress and Nginx follow the steps below if you need to modify them so they correspond with your page format use
http://danielmiessler.com/blog/redirect-archives-pages/
Check out Yoast
https://yoast.com/wp-content/permalink-helper.php
&
https://yoast.com/change-wordpress-permalink-structure/
Sorry for being MIA,
Tom
-
Hi Matt, thanks for the reply. I can give this a test.
The puzzling thing here is that Google has re-crawled those old page URLs at the old domain. It is getting 301 re-directed to the new URL. The content that Google has cached for the old URL is from the new URL and has the new URL listed as the source of the cached page.
Stephen
-
Force a recrawl by pinging the pages.
Get as complete a list as possible of the pages that are indexed. Then submit them to PingFarm, 247pinger and RankonTop.
We had 2500+ pages indexed from an old development server and this removed almost all of them in 2-3 weeks.
-
Hi David, you can see my responses to these questions in my reply to Thomas. But the URLs from old X.com are being 301d correctly to y.com. For the vast majority of duplicate listings shown for site:x.com, you can click on them and they get 301d to y.com and the cached version of a page in site:x.com shows y.com content and even the y.com URL in the cached description.
-
I am going to assume the 301 redirects are working when you click on them?
Hi Thomas,
Yes, the 301s work and confirmed with http headers
_You need to go into Google Webmaster tools and tell Google that you have moved from domain A to domain B this will make Google bot crawl both sites vigorously looking for 301 redirects. _
The migration was before my time, but I think that this was done. If I try to use the change of address on the old site, X.com, I just get a "There is no change of address pending for your site." message with no control options (conversely, if I tried to do the same thing for the current Y.com, it would give me the full list of instructions on how to migrate my site.)
I want to be certain that you did not 301 redirect domain to domain and not page to page. So if site X has homepage, about page, whatever page, and site Y would contain the exact same pages or equivalent pages that you would have already 301 redirected page 2 page not just point the domain at the other domain is that right?
The 301s are at a page level at X.com to the same equivalent page at Y.com. The majority of pages have migrated over without obvious problems. But it's a little disturbing to see new pages of y.com which have never been part of x.com somehow make it into a site:x.com query and listed with an x.com domain to start the URL.
So just to recap, site:x.com shows long-tail pages that clearly belong to site:y.com and were never part of x.com. The <title>of some of the site:x.com pages. for instance, are definitely from y.com pages. For some reason, Google is associating these pages with the x.com domain.</p> <p>If you click on the cached version of a listing for site:x.com, the cached version will show the content and URL of Y.com/foo in the cached description header. Clicking on the actual link gets you 301d from X.com/foo to Y.com/foo. Both events indicate that the 301 is working and that Google is recognizing the 301.</p> <p>I don't know if this impacting our SERPs or not. If I do a very page-specific search for "blue widgets A, B, and C in Montana" for a page that is indexed in both site:x.com and site:y.com, you only see y.com's page which is expected behavior. You don't see x.com in the SERPs for that specific query. It's only if you do site:x.com "blue widgets A, B, and C in Montana" do you see the duplicate listing. But again, clicking on the URL that is shown results in a 301 to the proper y.com page.</p> <p>I can dig deeper with my developers, check logs, etc. But it's weird. It's almost like Google sees a URL for y.com and indexes that URL for x.com and y.com even though it knows that y.com is the dominant or real page (evidenced by cached data info). Everytime I click on an site:x.com link, I get 301 redirected properly to the y.com equivalent.</p></title>
-
Did you keep the page URL structure the same on the new site? If so, you can do a simple htaccess rule that will forwards all traffic from one domain, to the corresponding pages on the other domain. If not, then you will have to go through and check each one manually.
Have all the steps been covered? Did you resubmit a new sitemap? Specify in "fetch as Google" that all the new pages on the new site be crawled? If you are using a CMS, did you check to see if multiple versions of a certain page exist, and forget to redirect those?
Lastly, even though you still see references to the old domain, do the 301 redirects work? Once clicked do they send a user to the new domain?
-
I am going to assume the 301 redirects are working when you click on them?
Going on that assumption and please correct me if I am wrong. You need to go into Google Webmaster tools and tell Google that you have moved from domain A to domain B this will make Google bot crawl both sites vigorously looking for 301 redirects. Basically any changes that have occurred when the first crawl is completed after approximately 90 days tell Google to crawl it again. You have a fairly large site based on the amount of links you are discussing. You need to get Google to find everything. That is the best way to tell Google that you are changing domains.
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/55281
Two references I would use. Each contains a lot of good information.
https://support.google.com/webmasters/topic/6033102?hl=en&ref_topic=6029673
&
http://moz.com/community/q/how-to-keep-old-url-juice-during-site-switch
"But when I do a site:X.com in Google, I still see about 6240 URLs of X listed. But if you click on a link, you get 301d to Y. Maybe Google has not re-crawled those X pages to know of the 301 to Y, right? The home page of X.com is shown in the site:X.com results. But if I look at the cached version, the cached description will say :This is Google's cache of Y.com. It is a snapshot of the page as it appeared on July 31, 2014."
I want to be certain that you did not 301 redirect domain to domain and not page to page. So if site X has homepage, about page, whatever page, and site Y would contain the exact same pages or equivalent pages that you would have already 301 redirected page 2 page not just point the domain at the other domain is that right?
I hope this helps,
Thomas
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
What is a good crawl budget?
Hi Community! I am in the process of updating sitemaps and am trying to obtain a standard for what is considered "strong" crawl budget? Every documentation I've found includes how to make it better or what to watch out for. However, I'm looking for an amount to obtain for (ex: 60% of the sitemap has been crawled, 100%, etc.)
Technical SEO | | yaelslater1 -
How to 301 trailing URLs to new domain home page - wildcard?
How would I add a redirect rule so all old domain URLs redirect to a new domain? All the old pages no longer exist on a new website. The domains have been through several CMS platforms, so it would be unnecessary to recreate them. Problem is, they're indexed in search engines from the past 10 years, so it's causing a lot of 404s. Example: search "NARI Tampa Bay" and you'll find 2 old domains: nari-tampabay.com & nari-tampabay.org. The new domain is naritb.org Those 2 old domains are now pointed to the same nameservers as the new and listed as parked domains. Here's the current rules in htaccess: <code>RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^nari-tampabay.org [NC,OR] RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^www.nari-tampabay.org [NC] RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://www.naritb.org/$1 [L,R=301] RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^nari-tampabay.com [NC,OR] RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^www.nari-tampabay.com [NC] RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://www.naritb.org/$1 [L,R=301]</code>
Technical SEO | | CartoMark0 -
Moving to old site to new domain sub directory
Hi, we've moved our old site to a new domain but in a subdirectory (the shopping site has been consolidated into overarching company website's shopping section, thus the move to sub dir). Are 301 redirects from old URLs to new domain's subdirectory ex newsite.com/shopping/page-1/ sufficient for site migration? I wasn't able to use Google's site address change tool since we're moving to a subdirectory on the new domain. Thanks
Technical SEO | | SoulSurfer80 -
Domain hacked and redirected to another domain
2 weeks ago my home page plus some others had a 301 redirect to another cloned domain for about 1 week (due to a hack).The original pages were then de-indexed and the new bad domain was indexed and in effect stole my rankings.Then the 301 was removed/cleaned from my domain and the bad domain was fully de-indexed via a request I made in WMT (this was 1 week ago).Then my pages came back into the index but without any ranking power (as if it's just in the supplemental index).It's been like this for a week now and the algorithms have not been able to correct it. So how do I get this damage undone or corrected? Can someone at Google reverse/cancel the 301 ranking transfer since the algorithms don't seem to be able to?I have the option to do a "Change of Address" in WMT from bad domain to my domain. But I don't think this would work properly because it says I also need to place a 301 on the bad domain back to mine. Would a change of address still work without the 301?Please advise/help what to do in order to get my rankings back to where they were.
Technical SEO | | Dantek0 -
Old domain vs. New keyword domain - Thoughts?
Okay. I'd like to get opinions as to what everyone thinks about domains lately. Here is any example: The current domain is general in nature, in fact, it's a persons name because they are a real estate agent. So the domain is something like JohnDoe.com. Current stats: Has approx. 130 linking domains pointing to it. Has over 300 incoming links from these linking domains. The link profile is clean and not spammy (not to say there are not a few that might be here and there) Was bough in 1994 The new domain would have very little value except it would be keyword rich such as PortlandHomesForSale.com (just an example). What are your thoughts. Thank you.
Technical SEO | | JordanRussell0 -
Prospective new client it by webspam looking for new resource
Background:
Technical SEO | | tcmktg
Prospective client recently hit by webspam update. (I have verified hundreds of low-quality links, porn links, backlink exchanges etc.) They want us to step in and remove bad links and start over. Question:
What is the best way to examine all the links to determine which need to be removed? We can create the report from open site, but how can we identify the bad links? Here are the site metrics. 5000+ linking domains, so in this example we need to research the 5000 links, and possibly send notifications to thousands of webmasters to remove the links? Open site states about 25,000 total links, but root links are shown below. Yikes. Domain Authority 75
External Followed Links 112,000
Total External Links 115,000
Total Links 150,000,
Followed Linking Root Domains 3,900
Total Linking Root Domains 5,300
Linking C Blocks 2,7000 -
Using an exsisting domain for a new busines?
I have a domain name that is in use and has a domain age of 4 years. My question is this, will taking that domain name and promoting it under a completely new business in a completely different industry with a totally different business model hurt getting this new business to rank? The domain name is my first and last name. I've been promoting videos that I like under this domain name. I would now like to use the domain name to promote my local SEO services. Will this hurt my efforts to rank with search engines since Google and others have been indexing the site for a certain industry and topic? Thanks
Technical SEO | | fun52dig
Gary0 -
Redirecting an Old Domain
One of my clients has a newish e-commerce website that was just redesigned. Part of this new marketing push is shutting down an old yahoo store. The problem is that this old store's domain has a 10 year old link in DMoz and is there fore in about 200 other directories. Is pointing that old domain at the new website going to be enough to keep all of that link juice flowing?
Technical SEO | | Simple_Machines0