How to keep the rank in google search engine database when changing ip address [duplicate]





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  • Would changing IP addresses affect my SEO

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I am a newbie in the field of website making. I currently made a website using Django and host it using digital ocean, I learn all of it by myself and I am very interested. However, I would like to learn google search engine optimization now and let people have a higher chance of visiting my website. And I wonder, because I am just testing my website status so I use Digital Ocean, what if in the near future, I change the hosting location ,and thus the ip address change, could google still keep the rank of the website when searching a particular website.










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marked as duplicate by Stephen Ostermiller Nov 14 at 13:21


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    This question already has an answer here:




    • Would changing IP addresses affect my SEO

      2 answers




    I am a newbie in the field of website making. I currently made a website using Django and host it using digital ocean, I learn all of it by myself and I am very interested. However, I would like to learn google search engine optimization now and let people have a higher chance of visiting my website. And I wonder, because I am just testing my website status so I use Digital Ocean, what if in the near future, I change the hosting location ,and thus the ip address change, could google still keep the rank of the website when searching a particular website.










    share|improve this question













    marked as duplicate by Stephen Ostermiller Nov 14 at 13:21


    This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.





    migrated from superuser.com Nov 14 at 12:39


    This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.

















      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite












      This question already has an answer here:




      • Would changing IP addresses affect my SEO

        2 answers




      I am a newbie in the field of website making. I currently made a website using Django and host it using digital ocean, I learn all of it by myself and I am very interested. However, I would like to learn google search engine optimization now and let people have a higher chance of visiting my website. And I wonder, because I am just testing my website status so I use Digital Ocean, what if in the near future, I change the hosting location ,and thus the ip address change, could google still keep the rank of the website when searching a particular website.










      share|improve this question














      This question already has an answer here:




      • Would changing IP addresses affect my SEO

        2 answers




      I am a newbie in the field of website making. I currently made a website using Django and host it using digital ocean, I learn all of it by myself and I am very interested. However, I would like to learn google search engine optimization now and let people have a higher chance of visiting my website. And I wonder, because I am just testing my website status so I use Digital Ocean, what if in the near future, I change the hosting location ,and thus the ip address change, could google still keep the rank of the website when searching a particular website.





      This question already has an answer here:




      • Would changing IP addresses affect my SEO

        2 answers








      search-engines web-hosting






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      asked Nov 14 at 10:13







      Luk Aron











      marked as duplicate by Stephen Ostermiller Nov 14 at 13:21


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.





      migrated from superuser.com Nov 14 at 12:39


      This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.






      marked as duplicate by Stephen Ostermiller Nov 14 at 13:21


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.





      migrated from superuser.com Nov 14 at 12:39


      This question came from our site for computer enthusiasts and power users.
























          1 Answer
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          The Google rank is related to the website domain and not to the IP.



          Most of the commercial sites as social networks, newspapers, etc. are identified by its name (facebook.com, nytimes.com, ebay.com, for example) but behind that name are a lot of servers on multiple countries.



          Each group of servers in the same physical place are behind a traffic balancer that have its own IP address. So for Google, the IP address means nothing, the important thing is the domain name.



          Even if you change the domain name in the future, Google provides tools to transfer the rank from one domain to another if the content has not changed.






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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes








            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            2
            down vote













            The Google rank is related to the website domain and not to the IP.



            Most of the commercial sites as social networks, newspapers, etc. are identified by its name (facebook.com, nytimes.com, ebay.com, for example) but behind that name are a lot of servers on multiple countries.



            Each group of servers in the same physical place are behind a traffic balancer that have its own IP address. So for Google, the IP address means nothing, the important thing is the domain name.



            Even if you change the domain name in the future, Google provides tools to transfer the rank from one domain to another if the content has not changed.






            share|improve this answer

























              up vote
              2
              down vote













              The Google rank is related to the website domain and not to the IP.



              Most of the commercial sites as social networks, newspapers, etc. are identified by its name (facebook.com, nytimes.com, ebay.com, for example) but behind that name are a lot of servers on multiple countries.



              Each group of servers in the same physical place are behind a traffic balancer that have its own IP address. So for Google, the IP address means nothing, the important thing is the domain name.



              Even if you change the domain name in the future, Google provides tools to transfer the rank from one domain to another if the content has not changed.






              share|improve this answer























                up vote
                2
                down vote










                up vote
                2
                down vote









                The Google rank is related to the website domain and not to the IP.



                Most of the commercial sites as social networks, newspapers, etc. are identified by its name (facebook.com, nytimes.com, ebay.com, for example) but behind that name are a lot of servers on multiple countries.



                Each group of servers in the same physical place are behind a traffic balancer that have its own IP address. So for Google, the IP address means nothing, the important thing is the domain name.



                Even if you change the domain name in the future, Google provides tools to transfer the rank from one domain to another if the content has not changed.






                share|improve this answer












                The Google rank is related to the website domain and not to the IP.



                Most of the commercial sites as social networks, newspapers, etc. are identified by its name (facebook.com, nytimes.com, ebay.com, for example) but behind that name are a lot of servers on multiple countries.



                Each group of servers in the same physical place are behind a traffic balancer that have its own IP address. So for Google, the IP address means nothing, the important thing is the domain name.



                Even if you change the domain name in the future, Google provides tools to transfer the rank from one domain to another if the content has not changed.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 14 at 10:25







                jcbermu






















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