If you find that your site is accessible using both non- and URLs, you should eliminate the duplication problem by using 301 redirects from one URL to the other, depending on your preference.
Switching from to S
From :.websiteom to s:.websiteom
Only 60% of websites are still using the S protocol , which obviously means that there are 40% that haven’t made the change yet.
If you’re switching your URLs from to S , you’ll want to use 301 redirects to ensure that Google indexes the new protocol correctly and sends users to the correct page instead of a 404 in place.
From s:.website.de to s:.websiteomde
Let's say you've decided that your international SEO strategy brazil mobile database will see you incorporate multiple ccTLDs into subfolders of your main om domain.
This requires the same redirection process as changing your domain name, except you’ll redirect to a folder instead of the root domain, and will require you to use Google Search Console’s Change of Address tool again, doing this on a subfolder level for your specific country.
Solving the "trailing slash" problem
From s:.websiteompage-name to s:.websiteompage-name
Did you know that variations of URLs with and without a trailing slash are actually different pages and will be considered different pages by Google?
You need to make sure your site uses a consistent method for handling trailing slashes on page URLs (which way you choose to use is your choice, but the web has historically used trailing slashes) and that 301 redirects from one rule to another are used with site-wide redirects.