
Updated by
Updated on Mar 18, 2026
Four methods let you check whether Google has indexed your web pages: the GSC URL Inspection Tool (most accurate, single URL), the GSC Page Indexing report (best for site-wide analysis), the site: search operator (quick approximation, not definitive), and third-party SEO crawlers (best for bulk analysis at scale). In 2026, checking Google indexation is only the first step. AI Overviews appear on approximately 21% of all Google searches, and Google AI Overviews draw exclusively from indexed content — but being indexed does not guarantee AI citation. After confirming indexation, use Dageno AI to check whether your indexed pages are actually being cited across AI platforms, and whether those citations are accurate.
If a page is not in Google's index, it is invisible to every discovery mechanism that depends on it: organic search rankings, featured snippets, Google AI Overviews, and the AI Mode conversational search experience. According to research on indexation rates at major websites, 16% of valuable indexable pages on well-known websites are never indexed — a silent revenue leak that most analytics tools cannot detect because unindexed pages generate no impressions or clicks to report.
In 2026, the stakes of unindexed pages extend into AI search. According to ALM Corp's 2026 industry analysis, Google AI Overviews now appear in up to 48% of tracked informational queries. A page not indexed cannot appear in any of these AI-generated responses, regardless of how relevant or authoritative its content is.
Checking indexation is therefore the first diagnostic step for any page that should be generating organic or AI-driven traffic but is not.
Best for: Confirming the current indexation status of individual pages with maximum accuracy.
The URL Inspection Tool is Google's most direct and reliable indexation check. It queries Google's index in real time for the specific URL you submit, returning the current status along with the last crawl date, any indexation issues, and how Googlebot renders the page.
How to use it:
https://)Reading the result:
"URL is on Google" — the page is indexed and eligible to appear in search results and Google AI Overviews.
"URL is not on Google" — the page is not indexed. The tool will display the reason: Crawled but not indexed (content quality issue), Discovered but not crawled (crawl budget or priority issue), Blocked by robots.txt, Blocked by noindex directive, or Redirect error.
Additional capabilities:
Limitations: Requires Google Search Console to be set up and verified for your property. Works on one URL at a time — impractical for bulk analysis across hundreds of pages.
Best for: Understanding your entire site's indexation health, identifying patterns of non-indexation across URL categories.
The Page Indexing report shows the aggregate indexation status of all URLs Google has discovered for your website — not just individual pages. It displays the count of indexed and non-indexed pages, and categorizes non-indexed pages by the specific reason Google did not index them.
How to access it:
What the report shows:
The reason categorization is the most actionable part of the report. A large volume in "Crawled — currently not indexed" indicates a content quality or duplication issue. A large volume in "Discovered — currently not indexed" indicates a crawl priority or crawl budget problem. Each category points to a different diagnostic and fix pathway.
Important limitation: The Page Indexing report data is slightly stale compared to the URL Inspection Tool's real-time query. For accurate current status of a specific URL, always use URL Inspection rather than relying on the Page Indexing report count.
For large sites: The detailed URL list in the Page Indexing report is limited to 1,000 example URLs per issue category. For sites with millions of pages, use the URL Inspection API for bulk analysis at up to 2,000 URL checks per day with full status data in the JSON response.
site: Search OperatorBest for: Quick approximation of how many pages Google has indexed for a domain, without GSC access.
The site: operator in Google Search returns pages from a specific domain that Google has indexed. Type site:yourdomain.com in Google search to see an approximation of indexed page count.
Variations:
site:yourdomain.com — all indexed pages across the domainsite:yourdomain.com/blog/ — indexed pages within a specific subdirectorysite:yourdomain.com "specific phrase" — confirms whether a specific page with that phrase is indexedCritical limitation: The site: operator returns an approximation, not a definitive count. Google has confirmed that the number shown in site: queries is not an accurate representation of the actual indexed page count. Use it for directional guidance only — a dramatic drop in site: results for your domain may indicate a deindexation event, but the absolute number shown is not reliable for precise indexation rate analysis.
For any page requiring confirmation of current indexed status, the URL Inspection Tool is always more accurate than the site: operator.
Best for: Bulk indexation analysis across large page sets, identifying unindexed URL patterns at scale.
Third-party crawling tools (Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, Botify) can crawl your site and check the indexation status of discovered URLs in bulk — combining their own crawl data with GSC API integration to identify which pages are not indexed and why.
Typical workflow:
For sites with 100,000+ pages, third-party crawlers with GSC API integration are the only practical way to analyze indexation at scale within GSC's 1,000-URL reporting limit.
Confirming that your pages are indexed answers "Can Google find and rank this page?" It does not answer "Is this page appearing in AI-generated responses for relevant queries?"
According to Ahrefs' March 2026 analysis, only 38% of Google AI Overview citations come from top-10 organic results. A page that is indexed, ranking well, and generating organic traffic may simultaneously be invisible in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Mode responses — because AI citation selection uses different signals than traditional ranking.
The measurement tools for this second layer of visibility are different from GSC. GSC tells you about Google indexation and organic click performance. It cannot tell you whether your pages are appearing in AI platforms.
*Dageno AI* closes this gap — tracking brand citation rates across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Google AI Mode, Gemini, Claude, Grok, Microsoft Copilot, DeepSeek, and Qwen simultaneously. Where GSC URL Inspection answers "Is this page indexed?", Dageno AI answers "Is this indexed page being cited by AI platforms — and what are they saying about my brand?"
The Intent Insights module extends this to competitive analysis: identifying the specific prompts where competitors' indexed pages earn AI citations that your indexed pages are missing, prioritizing which content gaps to address next.
The knowledge graph integration ensures that when your indexed pages do earn AI citations, the brand descriptions, product information, and positioning statements AI platforms generate are accurate — not hallucinated from outdated or inconsistent entity data across the web.
Pricing: Free plan available. Paid plans scale with prompt volume and monitoring frequency.
| Situation | Best Method |
|---|---|
| Checking a specific important page | GSC URL Inspection Tool |
| Understanding why many pages are not indexed | GSC Page Indexing Report |
| Quick check without GSC access | site: operator (directional only) |
| Bulk analysis across hundreds of pages | Third-party crawler + GSC API |
| Checking whether indexed pages earn AI citations | Dageno AI cross-platform monitoring |
| Identifying AI citation gaps vs. competitors | Dageno AI Intent Insights |
If a page shows as indexed in GSC, will it appear in Google AI Overviews?
Being indexed makes a page eligible for AI Overview citation but does not guarantee it. AI Overview citation selection weighs content structure, entity clarity, and authority signals beyond what determines organic rankings. Use Dageno AI to monitor actual AI citation performance.
How often should I check indexation?
Review the GSC Page Indexing report weekly for any significant changes in indexed page counts or new error categories. For high-priority individual pages (new launches, recently updated content, pages that should be driving traffic but aren't), use URL Inspection on a case-by-case basis.
Can a page be deindexed after being indexed?
Yes. Google continuously evaluates indexed pages against its quality thresholds. Pages can be deindexed if: content quality drops (thin rewrites replace original content), the page receives a noindex directive, it becomes orphaned from internal links, or a quality algorithm update shifts thresholds. The Page Indexing report trend chart shows whether indexed page counts are declining.

Updated by
Tim
Tim is the co-founder of Dageno and a serial AI SaaS entrepreneur, focused on data-driven growth systems. He has led multiple AI SaaS products from early concept to production, with hands-on experience across product strategy, data pipelines, and AI-powered search optimization. At Dageno, Tim works on building practical GEO and AI visibility solutions that help brands understand how generative models retrieve, rank, and cite information across modern search and discovery platforms.

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