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Google Index Checker — Is a Page Indexed?

Check whether your pages are in Google's index. A page that isn't indexed can't appear in search results, so indexing is the first step to ranking.

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Before a page can rank, it has to be in Google's index — the database of pages Google has crawled and stored. A page that isn't indexed simply can't appear in any search result, no matter how good it is. So when new content gets no traffic, the very first thing to rule out is that it hasn't been indexed at all.

Indexed is not the same as ranking

Indexing just means Google knows about the page and could show it. Where it ranks depends on relevance, quality, competition, and much else — a page can be indexed yet rank poorly or never surface for competitive queries.

If a page isn't indexed, common causes are: it's too new to have been crawled, a noindex tag or robots.txt rule is blocking it, the content is thin or duplicate, or nothing links to it. To fix it, make sure it isn't blocked, link to it, add it to your sitemap, and submit it via Google Search Console — whose URL Inspection tool also gives the definitive, authoritative answer on whether a specific URL is indexed.

Frequently asked questions

Is indexed the same as ranking on page one?
No. Indexing means Google knows about the page and could show it. Ranking depends on relevance, quality, and competition — a page can be indexed yet rank nowhere near page one.
What's the most authoritative way to confirm indexing?
For sites you own, Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool gives Google's own definitive answer on whether a URL is indexed and why. It's the ground truth any quick checker only approximates.

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