Rapid Index Check

URL Index Checker

Check if a specific URL appears indexed by Google and diagnose technical issues.

Free for up to 50 checks per day. No signup required.

Single URL triage

Use the URL Index Checker when one page needs a clear diagnosis

Single URL checks are best when a specific page matters: a sales page, new article, product page, documentation URL, or migrated page. Instead of scanning an entire site, this view keeps attention on the exact URL and its blockers.

The report is useful for support tickets and SEO handoffs because it separates symptoms from causes. A URL can be missing from search because it is blocked, canonicalized away, not discovered yet, or simply too new to have been indexed.

Recommended workflow

Run the check, fix any hard blocker first, then use GSC or Bing URL Inspection for the official crawl and index state. If there is no blocker, improve internal links and wait for the next crawl rather than repeatedly changing the URL.

What this check reviews

  • Submitted URL and final URL after redirects.
  • HTTP status and availability.
  • robots.txt, noindex, and X-Robots-Tag signals.
  • Canonical URL and suggested next action.

When to use a single URL check

  • A client asks why one important page is missing from search.
  • A new URL was submitted but still has no index signal.
  • A page changed template, CMS status, or canonical tag.
  • You want to verify a fix before requesting indexing again.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the URL Index Checker do?

This tool checks whether a specific URL appears to be indexed by Google and diagnoses technical issues that may prevent indexing, such as HTTP errors, robots.txt blocks, noindex tags, and canonical issues.

How is this different from a site: search?

A site: search only shows if Google has indexed a URL, but it does not explain why a page is not indexed. Our checker diagnoses the technical blockers that may be preventing indexing.

Can I check any URL?

You can check any publicly accessible URL. We cannot check pages behind login walls, pages that block our crawler, or pages on local/private networks.

How accurate is the index signal?

The index signal is approximate and based on public technical indicators. For definitive index status, use Google Search Console.