Indexability Checker
Audit one URL and answer the practical question: can Google crawl and index this page?
Free Indexability Checker
Indexability problems are often small technical signals with large traffic impact. This checker inspects the live response, robots.txt access, robots directives, canonical URL, and page metadata so you can see whether a page is eligible for Google indexing.
What this indexability audit checks
The report checks the HTTP status, final redirected URL, robots.txt rule for Googlebot, meta robots, X-Robots-Tag, canonical URL, title, description, and sitemap hints from robots.txt.
How to read the result
A page can be reachable but still not indexable. Hard blockers include non-200 responses, robots.txt disallow rules, and noindex directives. Canonical and metadata issues are usually cleanup tasks unless they point away from the page you expect to rank.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Google index a page blocked by robots.txt?
Google generally cannot crawl the blocked page content. If the URL is discovered elsewhere, it may still appear with limited information, but blocking crawl is not the same as controlling indexing with noindex.
What is the difference between noindex and robots.txt?
Noindex is a page-level directive that tells search engines not to index the page after they crawl it. robots.txt controls whether crawlers can request a path.
Does a different canonical URL block indexing?
Not directly. A canonical pointing elsewhere tells search engines that another URL is preferred, so the checked URL may not be selected for search results.
Why does final URL matter for SEO?
Search engines evaluate the final response after redirects. Unexpected final URLs can reveal redirect mistakes, canonical host issues, or migration problems.
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