Google is making a change to how users access its search service through country-specific domains. For years, if you wanted local search results, you would visit a country code top-level domain (ccTLD) like google.in for India or google.co.uk for the United Kingdom. These domain extensions were part of Google’s strategy to deliver location-based results.
However, things have changed over time. Since 2017, Google has improved how it serves localized results. No matter which version of Google you used—whether it was google.com or a country-specific domain—you would still see local search results relevant to your location.
Now, Google has decided that using different country-level domains is no longer necessary. So, over the next few months, users who visit any ccTLD (like google.ca, google.in, or google.com.au) will be automatically redirected to google.com. This move is meant to streamline the user experience and make things simpler.
You might be asked to re-enter some of your Search preferences during this change. But apart from that, nothing major will change. The way Search works remains the same, and Google will still follow national laws when required. The only visible difference will be the address bar showing google.com instead of the local domain.
This is just another step toward making Search more consistent and user-friendly, no matter where you are in the world.