TL DR
So if a user is regularly writing comments recommending users post on another stack exchange site and they do not appear qualified to make that suggestion, by all means do raise a custom mod flag and we can have a word with them.
Conditions for flagging
Unfortunately (as now this is confusing), I would encourage you to raise a custom mod flag if you see this type of repeated comment, with the following caveat:
Check the user's profile and see what communities they belong to.
If they don't have a decent reputation on the target site/s they continually recommend, then please do make a custom mod flag. I cringe when I see well meaning users making this type of suggestion, so am happy for community support with this.
Perhaps include this answer in the flag, so the moderator handling the flag, can see upon what authority you're making the flag (I don't want people to have these types of flags summarily declined).
When handling migration flags, generally, I check the flagger's profile for their activity on the target site. I'm not an expert on the other sites. I have had a fair bit to do with the folk on Code Review and will ask them there if they want a question. More often than not they say no. It's up to them, they're the experts on their site. They don't like it when we migrate off topic questions to their site.
The active members of potential target sites know if a question is a good fit or if it's a duplicate. It takes a fair bit of time to work out if a question is on topic for that site, by asking mods or high rep users on that site, so unless the flagger is a high rep user or a mod on the target site, I generally decline flags to migrate posts. With the exception if I think it may be a good fit for Code Review and I go and ask them first.
Leave a comment instead of flagging
The other option is to leave a comment for the user leaving these comments - if you feel brave, you can do so, linking to this answer. If they argue with you, raise a custom mod flag on the comment and let the mods step in.
For clarity, when people are drawn to this post, from
What is migration and how does it work?:
Don't migrate crap! Ever. If the question is likely to be closed or deleted on the destination site anyway, don't bother migrating it.
Just vote to close it normally and advise the OP of the other site in
the comments. If they decide to improve the question, then they can go
post it over there, or they can edit their question so it's on-topic
on the original site.
Check for cross-posts. It may be possible, that after hearing about the other site, that the OP may cross-post their question onto
the other site. Therefore, check the intended destination site for
potential cross-posts before voting to migrate. If it has been
cross-posted, vote to close it instead, as cross-posting is prohibited
even if the question is on-topic on both sites.
Avoid migrating answered questions. The point of migration is to send the question to a place where it is on-topic and can get
answered. If the OP already has an answer, then we've already defeated
the purpose of migration and the destination site won't have anything
to do with the question. Avoid migrating these questions unless they
are of extremely good quality and risk deletion on their current site.
Don't migrate for the sake of migration. We only migrate questions because they are off-topic on the original site. It is
perfectly possible for a question to be on-topic on multiple sites,
but that is not a reason to migrate it elsewhere, unless the OP
requests migration. As a general rule, if someone asks a question
here, and it's on-topic here, it should stay here.
Be familiar with the destination site. If you are not familiar with the destination site, read through its about page and help center
thoroughly and make sure the question actually belongs there. Don't
just look at the name of a site and automatically assume that the
question can be asked there. Each site has its own rules, and rules
vary greatly across sites.
If you're not sure, don't vote to migrate it. Let someone else who is sure do that, just vote to close it as off-topic, or ask for
opinions from the community in a relevant chat room.
I should add, that likewise with migration, sending people off to other sites is still potentially sending poor quality posts there. It's important people are familiar with the target site, what type of questions they accept and whether the question is well formed for that site.