Free Google Index Checker
Check whether your pages are indexed on Google and Bing. Paste one URL per line (up to 20) and get one-click site: searches for each.
How to Check if Your Page Is Indexed on Google
Knowing whether your pages are in Google's index is the first step to ranking. Our tool gives you instant access to Google's built-in site: operator for every URL you check.
Paste Your URLs
Add up to 20 URLs, one per line. Include the full path of each page you want to check.
Generate Checks
We build a Google site: query for each URL so you can verify indexing with one click.
Open and Verify
Click 'Check on Google' for each URL. If Google returns results, the page is indexed.
Why Trust Our Google Index Checker?
Our checker uses Google's own site: operator—the same method Google's search team recommends for verifying indexing.
20
URLs Per Check
Check up to twenty pages at once in a single batch.
100%
Direct From Google
Every check pulls live results from Google—no cached or scraped data.
<1s
Setup Time
Paste your URLs and start verifying indexing in under a second.
Automate Your SEO
Intelliminds writes, optimizes, and publishes full SEO articles to your blog automatically. From keyword research to publishing—done for you.
Why Do You Need to Check Your Google Index?
If a page isn't in Google's index, it can't rank for anything. Period. Checking your index status is the most fundamental SEO health check you can run on your site.
What does “indexed” mean?
When Google indexes a page, it crawls the content, understands what the page is about, and stores it in its database. Only indexed pages can appear in search results. If your page isn't indexed, it's effectively invisible to anyone searching Google, no matter how good the content is.
Why pages don't get indexed
Pages can fail to index for a range of reasons: blocked by robots.txt, marked noindex, low-quality content, duplicate content, slow loading, or simply not yet discovered by Googlebot. Regularly auditing your index status helps catch these issues before they sink your rankings.
The site: operator is Google's recommended way to check
Google itself recommends using the site: search operator as a quick indexing check. Searching site:yourdomain.com/page shows you exactly what Google has indexed for that URL. It's the same method SEO professionals use daily.
Check after every new publish
Just because you published a page doesn't mean Google has indexed it. New pages can take hours, days, or even weeks to appear. Checking your index status after publishing tells you whether Google has crawled the page and whether you need to submit it manually via Search Console.
Find pages that quietly dropped out
Sometimes Google deindexes pages without warning—often due to thin content, duplicate signals, or algorithm updates. Running periodic bulk index checks is the fastest way to catch dropped pages before they hurt your traffic. The earlier you catch it, the faster you can fix the underlying issue.
What Makes a Page Get Indexed?
Google indexes pages that are crawlable, useful, and unique. Here are the fundamentals every page needs to get into the index and stay there.
Crawlability
Make sure Googlebot can actually reach your page. Check that your robots.txt doesn't block it, that there's no noindex tag in the head, and that the page is linked from somewhere Google already crawls. Orphan pages with no internal links rarely get indexed.
Unique, valuable content
Google deprioritizes pages that duplicate existing content or offer little value. If your page is thin, AI-spammy, or near-identical to other pages on your site, it may be crawled but not indexed. Aim for substantial, original content that answers a specific question.
Strong internal linking
Internal links are how Google discovers and prioritizes pages on your site. Make sure every important page is linked from at least one other page—ideally from your homepage, main navigation, or a high-authority post. The more internal links, the faster the indexing.
Submit through Search Console
For new or updated pages, don't wait for Google to find them. Submit the URL through Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool. This typically gets your page crawled and indexed within hours instead of days.
Submit a sitemap
An XML sitemap tells Google about every page you want indexed. Submitting and keeping your sitemap up to date in Search Console helps Google discover new content faster and gives you visibility into what's indexed and what isn't.
Automate Your SEO
Let Intelliminds handle your entire content strategy—from publishing indexed articles to monitoring rankings over time.