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BetL925

: Will I preserve link equity if I use two redirects? I'm switching a social media site over to a Drupal platform. I'm planning to implement permanent directs (301) from each old url to the

@BetL925

Posted in: #301Redirect #Redirects #Seo

I'm switching a social media site over to a Drupal platform. I'm planning to implement permanent directs (301) from each old url to the new url.

I'm using page titles in the url string on the new site:
www.newsite.com/this-is-my-page-title

From a technical standpoint it would be easier for me to redirect to the page id:
www.newsite.com/node/123

which automatically redirects (with a 301) to the above title url.

Is there a problem using two redirects or is it better to just use one?

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@Karen161

You want to keep the 301-redirects to a minimum.

In summary:

It's better to just use one 301-redirect, because:


301-redirects inflict some loss of link juice every time they are used (probably more than Matt Cutts would want you to believe).
daisy-chaining 301-redirects is therefor not a good idea. Say for instance 90% of the link juice is passed on with the 301-redirect. Having another 301-redirect will in theory pass 90% x 90% = 81% of the link juice. Imagine the time you've put into linkbuilding. Preserve all the link juice you can.


Please note that canonical tags are mainly used as guidelines for the Search Engines. Google however usually obeys it.

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@Ogunnowo487

You better use canonical tag, any kind of redirection lose PageRank

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@Phylliss660

I wouldn't worry about it too much. Sure, in principle, the less redirects the better — but in practice, any bot or browser that can follow one redirect can certainly follow two, and the PageRank loss from redirects is minimal. Just do whatever works for you.

(In fact, as far as I know, no-one's confirmed that there's any PageRank loss from redirects within a site. Matt Cutts did confirm in an interview that 301 redirects can lose a small amount of PageRank, but that was in the context of cross-domain redirects.)

(Update: It has since been confirmed that, while 301 redirects may have lost some PageRank in the past, that doesn't happen any more. Go ahead and redirect as much as you like... within reason, that is. A 100-step redirect chain is still a bad idea, obviously.)

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@Kevin317

No, redirects lose a little bit PageRank so each time you redirect some PR is lost. Plus multiple redirects may cause other crawlers to be unable to follow them through to their final destination. So, ideally you'll keep your redirects to a minimum.

Apparently this has changed and the answer is, yes, you will preserve link equity.

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