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If we have a bunch of backlinks from HTTPS sites, but they link to the http://example.com version of our site or example.com.

Even if our site is HTTPS and once traffic gets driven to those URLS above it is 301'ed to the HTTPS version of the site. Will the reffer info still show up in Google Analytics ?

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2 Answers 2

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The referrer won't show up in Google Analytics.

There will be 1 request for the http site and then a second - which will have the http link as the referee.

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  • I'd add that if you want to see the referrer in Google Analytics, you should contact the other site and ask them to change the link to HTTPS. Commented Feb 10, 2021 at 11:56
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I have the feeling you are confusing something here. Google Analytics does indeed show referral traffic from various sources, i.e. referral, organic, social, ... you name it. And some referral traffic might be from sites/application that has TLS/SSL adopted (https). However, this has nothing to do with whether or not you are on https or HTTP.

You certainly should go to the Analytic settings of your Property and change the default URLs property to HTTPS instead of HTTP. And that's it.

When you are setting a 301 at the web server level (Apache, Nginx) from HTTP to https, it will be sufficient for Google to redirect all existing links to your new site. There are various discussions whether or not how much link juice is lost by switching to HTTPS and then forwarding - but generally speaking it is the right move.

There will be temporary loss in traffic (i.e. when HTTP URLs drop out of SERPs and until https replaces it - 3 to 5 days on average) and then the fact that rankings will temporarily be lost. Make sure you have a product/service people need, content that covers all searchers intent and reflects sales funnel, as well as an effective outreach campaign - and you will be just fine :)

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  • What is the situation if some subdomains are still HTTP and you switch back and forth into it?
    – Filozof666
    Commented Aug 20, 2019 at 5:25
  • I have no idea what you mean by that - but the general answer would be the security layer on top of the protocol will in no way influence this ... at all. Commented Aug 22, 2019 at 17:32
  • I mean what if i have xyz and ab.xyz and the second one is in example login path so you have to switch back and forth between those 2 and you are creating multi user/session experience and referral issue. So yes it actually can be influential but as well yes it can be fixed.
    – Filozof666
    Commented Aug 27, 2019 at 13:03

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