Google Indexing Issues: Diagnose Why Your Page Is Not Getting Indexed
Traffly uses Google Search Console data to tell whether a page is blocked, duplicated, weak, or simply too early to judge.
Requires project setup and Google Search Console connection.
Not every indexing issue is the same
Not indexed ≠ broken
A page can be undiscoverable, duplicated, blocked, weak, or simply too early.
Fixing the wrong thing wastes time
Most teams react prematurely or modify the wrong layer of the architecture.
What Traffly checks before telling you to change anything
Blocked or excluded
robots.txt, noindex tags, canonical conflicts, or non-indexable target destinations.
Discovered but weak
The page exists, but internal discovery or topical support signals are too weak for Google.
Duplicated or collapsed
Canonicalization or duplicate content clusters prevent clear URL indexing.
Too early to judge
Google has seen the page, but the site is still resting in an early observation phase.
Not Indexed
Google has not indexed your pages. Search visibility is impossible at this stage.
High position and CTR here only reflect brand query testing. They do not indicate category visibility.
From indexing symptoms to a clear next step
- 1
Validates whether the page is technically indexable
- 2
Checks whether the page is internally discoverable and supported
- 3
Distinguishes duplication and canonical problems from weak demand signals
- 4
Interprets search state instead of treating every low-signal page as a failure
What you get after analysis
Indexed, Not Categorized
Google can find your site, but does not yet know what problem it should be shown for.
Discovered but weak
Page has only 2 internal links. Topical support signal is below threshold.
Recommended action
- • Strengthen Internal Linking
Stop treating every non-indexed page as the same problem
Use Traffly to tell whether a page is blocked, duplicated, weak, or simply too early to judge.
Start indexing diagnosisCreate a project and connect GSC to diagnose indexing issues with real search signals.