Check whether your pages are indexed in Google. Paste your URLs (one per line) and instantly see which ones are live in Google's index and which need attention.
Drop your whole URL list and check every page's index status together.
Instantly see what's Indexed and what's missing from Google.
Real-time index lookups straight from Google search results.
A Google Index Checker is a tool that tells you whether a web page has been added to Google's search index. Indexing is the moment Google saves your page in its database and makes it eligible to appear in search results. If a URL is not indexed, it simply cannot rank for any keyword — your content stays invisible to searchers no matter how strong your SEO is.
This free bulk index checker lets you verify the index status of
many URLs at once. Instead of running a manual site: search for every
page, you paste your list, hit one button, and instantly see which pages are
indexed and which are missing from Google. It's the fastest way to audit your
website's indexation and catch problems before they quietly drain your traffic.
Test a whole batch of pages in one go instead of checking each URL one by one.
Every check pulls fresh data straight from Google's search results — no stale info.
No signup, no credit card. Just paste your URLs and get instant index status.
Download all your results in one click for reporting or further analysis.
Checking your Google index status takes just a few seconds with this tool:
Enter one URL per line — homepage, blog posts, product or service pages, anything you want to verify.
Click “Check Index Status” and the tool queries Google for every URL together, not one at a time.
Each URL shows as Indexed or Not Indexed. Download the full report as a CSV.
People often mix these up, but they're two separate stages. A page can be crawled (visited by Googlebot) yet still not be indexed (stored and made searchable). This index checker confirms the second, more important stage.
Before a page can show up in search, Google moves it through three steps. First, discovery — Google finds the URL through internal links, your sitemap, or external backlinks. Next, crawling — Googlebot fetches the page and reads its content, links, and signals. Finally, indexing — Google evaluates the page's quality and relevance and, if it passes, stores it in the index.
Every one of these steps can fail. A page with no internal links may never be discovered. A blocked page can't be crawled. A thin or duplicate page might be crawled but never indexed. That's exactly why checking your index coverage regularly is such an important part of any technical SEO routine.
Google has crawled the page, judged it worth keeping, and added it to its index. It's now eligible to rank and appear in search results. This is the status you want for every page that matters.
The page isn't in Google's index, so it won't show up for any search query. This usually signals a crawling, content, or technical issue worth investigating and fixing as soon as possible.
If a URL comes back as “Not Indexed”, one of these is usually behind it:
noindex tag is present. A meta robots or X-Robots-Tag header is explicitly telling Google not to index it.Found pages that aren't indexed? Work through this checklist to fix them quickly:
noindex tag and unblock the URL in robots.txt.This tool is built for anyone who relies on search traffic. SEO professionals and agencies use it to audit client sites and catch deindexed pages fast. Bloggers and content creators confirm that new posts actually made it into Google. E-commerce and business owners verify that product and service pages are live in search. Web developers check indexation after migrations, redesigns, or launches — when missing pages are easiest to overlook. If your pages need to be found on Google, this index checker belongs in your toolkit.
For most websites, a monthly index check is a healthy baseline. Run one any time you publish new content, complete a site migration or redesign, make big technical or template changes, or notice an unexplained drop in organic traffic. Catching an indexing problem early — before it spreads across hundreds of pages — can save you from weeks of lost rankings and revenue.
Indexing is the very first step of search visibility — and everything else depends on it. You can write brilliant content, build backlinks, and target the perfect keywords, but none of it works if your page isn't in Google's index. Regularly monitoring your indexation makes sure your most valuable pages stay searchable, confirms that fresh content gets picked up, and helps you spot silent issues before they hurt your traffic. In short: no index, no rankings, no leads.
Yes, it's completely free. You can check the index status of multiple URLs at once with no signup or login required.
It checks Google's live search results for each URL — the same logic as a site: search — and reports whether Google is currently returning that page.
Crawled means Googlebot has visited and read the page. Indexed means Google has stored it and made it searchable. A page must be indexed before it can rank.
Remove any noindex tag or robots.txt block, add internal links, improve thin content, fix canonicals, and then request indexing in Google Search Console.
Anywhere from a few hours to a few weeks. Strong internal linking, a clean XML sitemap, and requesting indexing in Search Console all speed up the process.
You can check up to 50 URLs per run. For a full site, paste your most important pages or work through your sitemap in batches.
No. Checking whether a page is indexed is a read-only lookup. It has no impact on your rankings or how Google treats your site.
Google sometimes crawls a page but decides not to index it due to thin or duplicate content, low value, or quality signals. Improving the page usually resolves this.
Mount Digital Technology fixes indexing and technical SEO issues, then grows your organic traffic the right way.
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