Why Is My Page Not Indexed?
Common reasons and diagnostic steps for pages that do not appear in Google search results.
Short Answer
A page may not be indexed due to technical blockers (robots.txt, noindex tags, canonical issues, HTTP errors), crawl budget constraints, content quality issues, or simply because Google has not discovered it yet. Use our Rapid Index Checker to diagnose specific technical issues.
Technical Blockers
1. robots.txt Disallow
If your robots.txt file contains a Disallow rule for the page or its directory, Googlebot will not crawl it.
Check your robots.txt at /robots.txt and ensure the page is not blocked.
2. noindex Meta Tag or X-Robots-Tag
A <meta name="robots" content="noindex"> tag in the HTML
or an X-Robots-Tag: noindex HTTP header tells search engines not to index the page.
These are common in staging environments, user profiles, or thank-you pages.
3. Canonical Issues
If the canonical tag points to a different URL, Google may index the target URL instead. Missing canonical tags can also cause issues with parameterized URLs or duplicate content.
4. HTTP Errors (4xx/5xx)
Pages returning 404 (Not Found), 410 (Gone), 500 (Server Error), or other error codes will not be indexed. Ensure your pages return 200 (OK) status codes.
5. Redirect Issues
Redirect chains, loops, or incorrect redirect types can prevent proper indexing. Use our Redirect Checker to test your URLs.
Crawl and Discovery Issues
6. Not in Sitemap
While not required, having a page in your XML sitemap helps Google discover it faster. Submit your sitemap through Google Search Console for better crawl efficiency.
7. Poor Internal Linking
Pages with few or no internal links may not be discovered during crawling. Ensure important pages are linked from your navigation, homepage, or related content.
8. Crawl Budget Constraints
Large sites with many low-quality pages may exhaust their crawl budget, leaving important pages uncrawled. Improve site speed, fix broken links, and consolidate thin content.
Content and Quality Issues
9. Thin or Duplicate Content
Pages with little unique content, auto-generated content, or near-duplicates of other pages may be de-indexed or never indexed. Focus on creating original, valuable content.
10. Manual Actions or Penalties
If your site has received a manual action from Google, affected pages may be removed from the index. Check Google Search Console for any manual action notifications.
Run a Technical Check
Use our free tool to diagnose technical indexability issues for any URL.
Run Index Check