Re: Multicounty domain configuration

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Multicounty domain configuration

Mikey77
New Member
8 0 0

Hello All,

Looking for Some SEO Advice

I currently have www.domain.co.uk as my primary domain, targeting the United Kingdom, and it has been running for just over a year. Recently, I set up www.domain.com, targeting the United States, and localised the content into American English.

 

  1. Should I set up a domain property in Google Search Console and submit a sitemap for the .com domain, or would this lead to duplicate content issues?

  2. I’m planning to expand my business into Europe and considering purchasing www.domain.eu. Ideally, I’d like to use subfolders for different countries (e.g., /fr for France). However, I believe this can only be done under the primary domain. This would mean structuring the URLs like www.domain.co.uk/fr, which doesn’t seem ideal.

    Aside from making www.domain.com the primary domain and using subfolders for different countries, are there any better options for international targeting?

Any help would be appreciated.

Accepted Solution (1)

beauxbreaux
Shopify Partner
299 27 60

This is an accepted solution.

Great question—international SEO can definitely get tricky, but you're already on the right track by thinking it through early.

To answer your first question: yes, you should set up a separate domain property in Google Search Console for your .com site and submit a sitemap. This won't automatically cause duplicate content issues, as long as you've properly localized the content. Since you've already adjusted it to American English, Google should treat it as unique enough, especially if you tailor other elements like spelling, examples, pricing, or even imagery to suit a U.S. audience.

To help further, make sure you:

Set the correct target country in each Search Console property.
Use hreflang tags to signal the language and regional targeting of each version (e.g., en-GB for UK and en-US for the U.S.).
Avoid exact content duplication across the domains.
As for expansion into Europe, your concern is valid. Using subfolders like /fr is a solid approach for country targeting, but yes—this method requires everything to be under a single domain. Structuring URLs like www.domain.co.uk/fr isn't ideal because:

The .co.uk TLD signals UK targeting, which can conflict with your intent to reach French users.
It may cause confusion or impact rankings for other European regions.
If international growth is a big part of your plan, you might consider:

Best Option: Move everything to the .com domain
Use subfolders for each country/language (/uk, /us, /fr, /de, etc.)
Consolidates authority and backlinks on one domain
Easier to manage long-term from an SEO standpoint
Use hreflang tags to help Google serve the correct version
This is the SEO structure that international brands such as Zara use to promote products internationally. 
Beaux Barker
Developer
Buy me a Coffee

View solution in original post

Replies 2 (2)

beauxbreaux
Shopify Partner
299 27 60

This is an accepted solution.

Great question—international SEO can definitely get tricky, but you're already on the right track by thinking it through early.

To answer your first question: yes, you should set up a separate domain property in Google Search Console for your .com site and submit a sitemap. This won't automatically cause duplicate content issues, as long as you've properly localized the content. Since you've already adjusted it to American English, Google should treat it as unique enough, especially if you tailor other elements like spelling, examples, pricing, or even imagery to suit a U.S. audience.

To help further, make sure you:

Set the correct target country in each Search Console property.
Use hreflang tags to signal the language and regional targeting of each version (e.g., en-GB for UK and en-US for the U.S.).
Avoid exact content duplication across the domains.
As for expansion into Europe, your concern is valid. Using subfolders like /fr is a solid approach for country targeting, but yes—this method requires everything to be under a single domain. Structuring URLs like www.domain.co.uk/fr isn't ideal because:

The .co.uk TLD signals UK targeting, which can conflict with your intent to reach French users.
It may cause confusion or impact rankings for other European regions.
If international growth is a big part of your plan, you might consider:

Best Option: Move everything to the .com domain
Use subfolders for each country/language (/uk, /us, /fr, /de, etc.)
Consolidates authority and backlinks on one domain
Easier to manage long-term from an SEO standpoint
Use hreflang tags to help Google serve the correct version
This is the SEO structure that international brands such as Zara use to promote products internationally. 
Beaux Barker
Developer
Buy me a Coffee
Mikey77
New Member
8 0 0

Thank you for your reply, this is a great help and very much appreciated. I will start implementing these changes. 🙂