Page With Redirect: Which URL Is Google Actually Indexing?

Google says the redirect target "might or might not be indexed" without telling you which URL it's actually seeing. This tool shows exactly where your redirect goes, whether it's clean, and which URL Google will index.

Verify redirect behavior, check which URL Google actually sees, and confirm whether page signals are pointing to the right destination.

  • Answers: Is Google seeing the right page?
  • Maps the complete redirect chain
  • Verifies redirect destination and status codes
  • Checks if page signals point to the right URL
  • Confirms Google sees the same redirect as visitors

What this status means

"Page with redirect" means the URL you're checking redirects to another page. Google will index the destination page, not the redirecting URL. This tool helps you confirm Google is seeing the page you want indexed.

Why it happens

Redirects are normal, but problems can occur if redirects create long chains or loops, if page signals conflict with where the redirect goes, or if access rules block either the source or destination. These issues can confuse Google about which page to index.

What this tool checks

This tool shows you exactly where the redirect goes, whether the redirect chain is clean, whether page signals point to the right destination, and whether Google sees the same redirect behavior as regular visitors. It helps you confirm Google is indexing the page you expect.

What this tool answers
Is the redirect working correctly, and is Google seeing the page you want indexed? We check where the redirect goes, whether the chain is clean, and whether page signals point to the right destination.

If the redirect is working
When redirects are clean and page signals are correct, Google should index the destination page. If the destination page still shows indexing issues, check that page separately to see what might be blocking it.