"Currently not indexed" — is something blocking Google?

When Search Console shows "Currently not indexed," Google knows about your page but hasn't added it to search results. This could mean something is technically blocking it, or Google simply decided not to index it yet. This tool tells you which one.

Check if redirects, access rules, or other technical signals are preventing Google from indexing this page.

  • Answers: Is something blocking Google from indexing?
  • Checks if the page tells Google not to index it
  • Verifies redirects and access rules
  • Compares what Google sees vs. regular visitors
  • Clear next steps when issues are found

What this status means

"Currently not indexed" means Google found your page but chose not to add it to search results. This happens for two main reasons: either something is technically blocking Google, or Google decided the page isn't worth indexing based on how it compares to the rest of your site.

Why it happens

Google might skip indexing if the page seems too similar to other pages, has weak internal links pointing to it, or appears less valuable than other URLs on your site. Technical problems like redirects that send Google in circles, conflicting page signals, or access rules that block Google can also cause this status.

What this tool checks

This tool answers one question: Is something technically blocking Google from indexing this page? It checks whether Google can access the page, whether the page tells Google not to index it, whether redirects are working correctly, and whether Google sees the same content as regular visitors. If nothing is blocked, the results explain what to investigate next.

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.