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    Home»SEO & Digital Marketing»Google Says It Can Handle Multiple URLs To The Same Content
    SEO & Digital Marketing

    Google Says It Can Handle Multiple URLs To The Same Content

    adminBy adminApril 8, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Google Says It Can Handle Multiple URLs To The Same Content
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    Google’s John Mueller answered a question about duplicate URLs appearing after a site structure change. His response offers clarity about how Google handles duplicate content and what actually influences indexing and ranking decisions.

    Concern About Duplicate URLs And Ranking Impact

    A site owner had changed the URL structure of their web pages then later discovered that older versions of those URLs were still accessible and appearing in Google Search Console.

    The person asking the question on Reddit was concerned that requesting recrawls of the older URLs might confuse Google or lead to ranking issues.

    They asked:

    “I switched over themes a while back and did some redesign and at some point …I changed all my recipes urls by taking the /recipe/ part out of site.com/recipe/actualrecipe so it’s now just site.com/actualrecipe but there are urls that still work when you put the /recipe/ back in the url.

    I went to GSC and panicked that a bunch of my recipes weren’t indexed due to a 5xx error (I think it was when my site was down for a few days).

    Now I’ve requested a bunch of them already to be recrawled, but realizing maybe google was ignoring them for a reason, like it didn’t want the duplicates.

    Are my recrawl requests for /recipe/ urls going to confuse google who might penalize my ranking for the duplicates?”

    The question reflects a reasonable concern that duplicate URLs and content might negatively affect rankings, especially when the error is surfaced through the search console indexing reports.

    Google Is Able To Handle Duplicate URLs

    Google’s John Mueller answered the question by explaining that multiple URLs pointing to the same content do not trigger a penalty or loss of search visibility. He also noted that this kind of duplication is common across the web, implying that Google’s systems are experienced with handling this kind of problem.

    He explained:

    “It’s fine, but you’re making it harder on yourself (Google will pick one to keep, but you might have preferences).

    There’s no penalty or ranking demotion if you have multiple URLs going to the same content, almost all sites have it in variations. A lot of technical SEO is basically search-engine whispering, being consistent with hints, and monitoring to see that they get picked up.”

    What Mueller is referring to is Google’s ability to canonicalize a single URL as the one that’s representative of the various similar URLs. As Mueller said, multiple URLs for essentially the same content is a frequent issue on the web.

    Google’s documentation lists five reasons duplicate content happens:

    1. “Region variants: for example, a piece of content for the USA and the UK, accessible from different URLs, but essentially the same content in the same language
    2. Device variants: for example, a page with both a mobile and a desktop version
    3. Protocol variants: for example, the HTTP and HTTPS versions of a site
    4. Site functions: for example, the results of sorting and filtering functions of a category page
    5. Accidental variants: for example, the demo version of the site is accidentally left accessible to crawlers”

    The point is that duplicate content is something that happens often on the the web and is something that Google is able to handles.

    Technical SEO Signals

    Mueller said Google will pick one URL to keep, but added that the site owner might have preferences. That means Google will canonicalize the duplicates on its own, but the site owner or SEO can still signal which URL is the best choice (the canonical one) for ranking in the search results.

    That is where technical SEO comes in. Internal linking, redirects, the proper use of rel=”canonical”, sitemap consistency, and consistency in 301 redirects all work as hints that help Google identify on the version you actually want indexed.

    The Real Problem Is Mixed Signals

    Mueller’s remark about making it harder on yourself was about the site owner/SEO spending time requesting URLs to be recrawled and noting that Google will figure it out on its own. But then he also referenced preferences, which alluded to all the signals I previously mentioned, in particular the rel=”canonical”.

    Technical SEO Is Often About Reinforcing Preferences

    Mueller’s description of technical SEO as “search-engine whispering” is useful because it captures how much of SEO involves reinforcing your preferences for what URLs are crawled, which content is chosen to rank, and indicating which pages of a website are the most important. Google may still choose a canonical on its own, but consistent signals increase the chance that it chooses the version the site owner wants.

    That makes this a good example of what SEO is all about: Making it easy for Google to crawl, index, and understand the content. That’s really the essence of SEO. It is about being clear and consistent in the content, URLs, internal linking, overall site navigation, and even in showing the cleanest HTML, including semantic HTML (which makes it easier for Google to annotate a web page).

    Semantic HTML can be used to clearly identify the main content of a web page. It can directly help Google zero in on what’s called the Centerpiece content, which is likely used for Google’s Centerpiece Annotation. The centerpiece annotation is a summary of the main topic of the web page.

    Google’s canonicalization documentation explains:

    “When Google indexes a page, it determines the primary content (or centerpiece) of each page. If Google finds multiple pages that seem to be the same or the primary content very similar, it chooses the page that, based on the factors (or signals) the indexing process collected, is objectively the most complete and useful for search users, and marks it as canonical. The canonical page will be crawled most regularly; duplicates are crawled less frequently in order to reduce the crawling load on sites.”

    Technical SEO And Being Consistent

    Stepping back to take a forest level view, duplicate URLs are really about a website not being consistent. Being consistent is not often seen as having to do with SEO but it actually is, on a general level. Every time I have created a new website I always had a plan for how to make it consistent, from the URLs to the topics, and also how to be able to expand that in a consistent manner as the website grows to cover more topics, to build that in.

    Takeaways

    • Multiple URLs to the same content do not cause a penalty or ranking demotion
    • Google will usually pick one version to keep
    • Site owners can influence that choice through consistent technical signals
    • The real issue is mixed signals, not duplicate content itself
    • Technical SEO often comes down to reinforcing clear preferences and monitoring whether Google picks them up
    • The forest-level view of SEO can be seen as being consistent

    Featured Image by Shutterstock/Andrey_Kuzmin

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