Introduction: The Real Problem Beginners Face
You added a custom domain to your Blogger website, such as:
https://yourdomain.com
But when you search your site on Google, you still see:
yourblog.blogspot.comor sometimes both URLs indexed
This situation confuses many beginners and can feel scary—especially if you’re preparing to apply for Google AdSense.
Here’s the truth:
👉 This issue is very common
👉 It does not mean your site is broken
👉 And it can be fixed safely without risking SEO or AdSense
In this 2026 guide, you’ll understand:
Why Google still shows the Blogspot URL
What Google is actually detecting
The correct, Google-safe solution for beginners
What This Issue Actually Means
If Google still shows your Blogspot URL, it does not mean:
❌ Your custom domain failed
❌ Blogger SEO is broken
It usually means:
Google has not yet fully confirmed which URL version should be treated as the main one.
In simple terms:
Canonical signals are still settling
Redirect signals are still being processed
Google is verifying consistency
This is a signal clarity issue, not a penalty.
Common Situations Where This Happens
This issue usually appears when:
The custom domain was added recently
The website is new (0–3 months old)
Blogspot URLs were indexed earlier
Sitemap was not updated properly
Old Search Console properties are still active
All of these are normal beginner scenarios.
A Critical Mistake Beginners Must Avoid
Many beginners panic and do things like:
❌ Blocking Blogspot URLs in robots.txt
❌ Adding random canonical tags to the theme
❌ Forcing URL removals in Search Console
These actions can:
Deindex pages
Kill organic traffic
Create AdSense risk
We’ll follow only Google-safe methods.
Step 1: Confirm the Custom Domain Setup in Blogger
Go to:
Blogger Dashboard → Settings → Publishing
Make sure:
Your custom domain is correctly shown
HTTPS is ON
Redirect domain is ON
If redirect is OFF:
Google keeps seeing Blogspot URLs
Your custom domain signal stays weak
This single setting solves many cases.
Step 2: Understand Blogger’s Automatic Redirect System
Blogger automatically applies:
301 redirects from Blogspot to your custom domain
However:
Google does not trust redirects instantly
Especially on new or low-authority sites
So for some time:
Blogspot URLs may still appear in search
This is temporary behavior, not an error.
Why Google Still Prefers the Blogspot URL
Google may prefer the Blogspot URL if:
It was indexed before the custom domain
External links still point to Blogspot
Old sitemaps are present
Search Console setup is incomplete
Google always follows the strongest and clearest signal.
In some cases, this issue is also connected with security signals. If your custom domain is working but certain pages still load without HTTPS or show browser warnings, Google may hesitate to fully prioritize your custom domain. You should also make sure that your site does not display “Not Secure” warnings after switching to a custom domain, as this can affect trust signals.
👉 Read this guide: Blogger Custom Domain Working but Pages Showing as “Not Secure” on google.
Step 3: Correct Google Search Console Setup (Very Important)
Many beginners make mistakes here.
Best practice:
Do not rush to delete the Blogspot property
Add your custom domain as a Domain Property
Submit only the custom domain sitemap
This tells Google:
“This is the primary version of the site.”
Step 4: Update the Sitemap Properly
After adding a custom domain:
Old Blogspot sitemaps become outdated
Google may continue crawling old URLs
Always submit:
https://yourdomain.com/sitemap.xml
And keep only this sitemap active.
This gives Google a strong consolidation signal.
Step 5: Why You Should NOT Force Deindex Blogspot URLs
Some guides recommend:
Removing Blogspot URLs manually
Blocking them via robots.txt
This can:
Delay ranking recovery
Reduce crawl trust
Confuse Google further
The safest approach:
Let Google drop Blogspot URLs naturally
Strengthen canonical + redirect signals
In 2026, Google prefers natural resolution.
How Long Does Google Take to Update?
Typical timelines:
Brand-new site: 2–6 weeks
Small site with some content: 1–3 weeks
Older site with authority: a few days
If:
Content is helpful
Sitemap is correct
No technical errors exist
Google will eventually show only the custom domain.
Is This a Risk for Google AdSense?
Short answer: No, if handled correctly.
AdSense problems happen when:
Duplicate content is clearly visible
Same pages load on multiple URLs
User experience feels confusing
If:
Redirects are enabled
Canonical signals are consistent
Content is original
This situation is considered normal by AdSense.
When Should You Be Concerned?
You should investigate further if:
More than 2–3 months pass
Blogspot URLs remain primary
Custom domain pages don’t index
That requires deeper technical checks
(which we’ll cover in future articles).
Final Thoughts for Beginners
If Google still shows your Blogspot URL:
✔ Don’t panic
✔ Don’t use shortcuts
✔ Follow Google-safe steps
This is a temporary and common issue.
With patience and correct setup, Google will recognize your custom domain as the main version.
Clear signals + time = stable rankings

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