There’s quite a bit of confusion over 301 redirects and how they effect SEO and a sites rankings. We’ve extensively used permanent 301 redirects on both our own and client sites and in this article I’ll explain how to use them and what you should expect SEO wise.
First some basic information for those new to permanent redirects.
What is a permanent 301 Redirect
A 301 or permanent redirect basically tells a browser (or search engine spider) that the site or page it is accessing has moved permanently. It then immediately redirects that page to the new one.
Search engines like Google will attempt to pass SEO benefit (PR and anchor text benefits) from the old page to the new page.