Ask HN: Does putting a blog on a subdomain vs. subdirectory matter in 2024?
I've been setting up a blog for a project and have always heard the common wisdom to never put the blog in a subdomain (blog.site.com) and instead to always put it as a subdirectory (site.com/blog)
you see a lot of it here from the 2010s. ex: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1176438
But I just ran into a comment on reddit saying that modern Google does not make a distinction anymore. If that's true it would be a hell of a lot easier for me. I could setup the subdomain proxying via cloudflare super easily. If I had to do a subdirectory I would either have to setup cloudflare workers or do some much more complicated reverse proxying
https://www.searchenginejournal.com/google-treats-subdomains-subdirectories-john-mueller-says/254687/
3 comments
[ 10.0 ms ] story [ 135 ms ] threadI have done (and do still, sometimes) both
Sometimes I even have it in a subdirectory with a subdomain alias to get there
I do not think it ever really 'mattered' - all that mattered was how you wanted to think about it
Yes, Hubspot uses a subdomain, but you're not Hubspot.
Timestamp: https://www.youtube.com/live/kQIyk-2-wRg?feature=shared&t=67...
Here's him again, though in 2017, being more explicit about blogs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJGDyAN9g-g
Here's additional documentation about why site diversity rules collapse subdomains into the root: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/appearance/ranking...
For a third party's take, here's semrush in Nov 2023: https://www.semrush.com/blog/subdomain-vs-subdirectory/
"The choice between subdomains and subdirectories largely depends on reasons outside of SEO. Both can be SEO-friendly."