"Crawled – currently not indexed" — why didn't Google index it?
Google successfully crawled your page but still didn't add it to search results. This usually means Google can access the page, but something is preventing indexing. This tool finds out what.
Check if redirects, page signals, access rules, or content differences are preventing Google from indexing this page.
- Answers: Why didn't Google index after crawling?
- Checks if page signals are blocking indexing
- Verifies redirects and access rules
- Compares what Google sees vs. regular visitors
- Identifies if it's a technical issue or site-wide decision
What this status means
"Crawled – currently not indexed" means Google successfully accessed your page but chose not to add it to search results. Since Google can reach the page, the issue is usually subtle: either something on the page is telling Google not to index it, or Google decided the page isn't worth indexing based on site-wide factors.
Why it happens
Google might skip indexing if the page looks too similar to other pages you already have indexed, seems less important than other URLs, or doesn't add enough unique value. Technical issues like page signals that conflict with each other, redirects that create confusion, or access rules that partially block Google can also contribute to this status.
What this tool checks
This tool checks whether something on the page is technically preventing Google from indexing it. It looks for signals that tell Google not to index the page, checks whether redirects are working correctly, verifies access rules, and confirms whether Google sees the same content as regular visitors. If nothing is blocking it, the results explain what broader factors to investigate.
What this tool answers
Is something technically blocking Google from indexing this page? We check whether Google can access the page, whether it's being told not to index it, and whether Google sees the same content as regular visitors.
If nothing is blocked
When technical checks are clean, indexing decisions are usually driven by site-wide factors like internal linking, content duplication, or how the page fits into your overall site structure. Your results will point you toward what to investigate next.
