Indexing

The process where search engines store and organize crawled pages in their searchable database.

Indexing is when a search engine adds your page to its database after crawling it. Think of crawling as reading a book and indexing as adding it to the library catalog. Once a page is indexed, it can appear in search results.

Not every crawled page gets indexed. Google might skip pages that are low quality, duplicate, blocked by a noindex tag, or that don't add enough unique value. Google's index contains hundreds of billions of pages, but that's still a fraction of what's been crawled.

You can check if a page is indexed by searching "site:yoururl.com/page" in Google. If it shows up, it's indexed. Google Search Console's Coverage report gives you a comprehensive view of your entire site's indexing status.

To get pages indexed faster, submit them through Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool, link to them from already-indexed pages, include them in your sitemap, and ensure they're not blocked by robots.txt or noindex tags.

Why It Matters for SEO

No index, no rankings. If your pages aren't in Google's index, they literally don't exist in search results. Monitoring your indexing status ensures your important content is discoverable by searchers.

🔍 How to Check This

Run an AuditMySite scan to identify pages with noindex tags or other issues preventing indexing.

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