SEO UTILITIES
Google Cache Checker — Cache Retired in 2024
Google retired its public cached-page link and cache: operator in 2024. Here's what that means and how to view past versions of a page instead.
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For years, Google kept a cached copy of pages it crawled and offered a 'Cached' link in results — plus a cache: search operator — that let anyone view Google's stored snapshot. In 2024, Google retired that public feature: the cached link vanished from results and the cache: operator stopped working.
So there is no longer a Google cache to check. Any tool promising to show you 'the Google cache' today is describing something that effectively no longer exists — worth knowing before you spend time chasing a dead feature.
How to view a page's past versions instead
The practical alternative is the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, an independent service that has long saved snapshots of web pages over time. Enter a URL there and you can browse archived versions by date — the closest replacement for the old Google cache.
For your own verified sites, Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool can also show details about the crawled version of a page. But there's no general public cached-view feature for arbitrary URLs the way there used to be, and the cache going away doesn't affect SEO — it was a viewing convenience, never a ranking factor. Google still crawls and indexes exactly as before; it simply no longer exposes its stored copy.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I still view Google's cached version of a page?
- No. Google removed the public cached-page link and retired the cache: operator in 2024. There's no longer a Google cache for users to view.
- How do I see what a page looked like before?
- Use the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, which independently saves snapshots of pages over time. Enter the URL there and browse archived versions by date.
- Does the cache going away affect my SEO?
- No. The cache was a viewing convenience, not a ranking factor. Google still crawls and indexes your pages as before; it just no longer shows the public a stored copy.