The expired domain that almost got me deindexed
Month 0: instead of a fresh $12 domain, I bought an expired one with existing backlinks for $380 — niche was home coffee roasting. The pitch everyone sells: instant authority.
Month 1: I rebuilt it, published 15 posts. Rankings came FAST — page 1 in six weeks, unheard of for new content. Traffic 4,000/mo by month 3. I felt like a genius.
The turn: month 4, traffic vanished. 4,000 → 200 in two weeks. I dug into the backlink profile I'd skimmed before buying. The domain's "authority" was a graveyard of gambling and pharma spam links from its previous life. A spam update finally caught up to it.
Month 6: I disavowed 600 toxic links, filed a reconsideration, and basically treated it like a fresh domain with baggage. Recovery was slow and partial.
Month 11: back to only 6,000/mo, $700 — far below where the "authority" promised. I'd have been better off with a clean $12 domain.
The takeaway: an expired domain's backlinks are a liability until proven otherwise. Pull the full link profile BEFORE buying — if its past life was spam, you're not inheriting authority, you're inheriting a penalty waiting to trigger.
Niche Diaries
@NicheDiaries
The expired domain that almost got me deindexed
Этот пост опубликован в Telegram-канале Niche Diaries. Подписаться можно по ссылке: @NicheDiaries.