Free SEO Tool

Bulk Google Index Checker

Paste a list of URLs to generate a per-URL Google site: lookup, then mark each as indexed or not indexed. Your progress is saved in your browser and you can export the full report to CSV.

How it works: click Check on Google per row, then mark the result. Your data stays in this browser.

How to Check If Your Pages Are Indexed by Google

A bulk Google index checker helps you monitor which of your URLs Google has actually added to its index. Indexing is the prerequisite for appearing in search results — a page that is not indexed cannot rank. This tool turns the manual site: lookup into a repeatable, exportable workflow.

What Does It Mean for a Page to Be Indexed?

When Google indexes a page, it has crawled the URL, analyzed the content, and decided the page is worth storing in its search index. Only indexed pages are eligible to appear in Google search results. A page can be crawled but not indexed (Google decided not to store it), or not crawled at all.

The fastest way to check if a URL is indexed is the site: operator. Searching site:example.com/pagereturns the page if Google has it indexed, or a "did not match any documents" message if it does not.

How to Use This Bulk Index Checker

  1. 1Paste your URLs into the box above, one per line. You can also import a .txt or .csv file.
  2. 2For each row, click Check to open a Google site: lookup for that exact URL in a new tab.
  3. 3Mark the row Indexed or Not Indexed based on what Google returns. Your progress is saved automatically in this browser.
  4. 4Use Export CSV to download the full report with URL, status, and timestamp for your records or to share with a team.

The Authoritative Source: Google Search Console

For sites you own, the most reliable indexed pages checker is Google Search Console. Its Pages report (under Indexing) lists every URL Google has indexed for your property and groups non-indexed URLs by reason: crawled but not indexed, discovered but not crawled, blocked by robots.txt, duplicate, and more.

The URL Inspection tool inside Search Console shows the live index status of any single URL on a property you have verified. This browser tool complements Search Console by letting you track URLs across many domains or competitor pages you do not own.

Common Reasons Pages Are Not Indexed

  • A noindex directive or a robots.txt block is preventing indexing.
  • The page is orphaned — no internal links point to it, so Google never discovers it.
  • Content quality signals — thin, duplicate, or low-value content Google chooses not to store.
  • Crawl budget limits on very large sites, or the page is simply too new and has not been crawled yet.

Frequently Asked Questions

The quickest method is a Google site: lookup. Search for site:followed-by-your-url (for example, site:example.com/page) in Google. If Google returns your page as a result, it is indexed. If Google says it did not match any documents, the page is not indexed.

Yes, through Google Search Console. The URL Inspection tool checks one URL at a time, and the Pages report in the Indexing section lists indexed and non-indexed URLs for a verified property. The Index Coverage report is the authoritative source of index status for a site you own.

No, and deliberately so. Automated bulk querying of Google search results violates Google's Terms of Service, is unreliable because of rate limiting and CAPTCHAs, and would return inaccurate data. Instead, this tool generates an individual site: lookup link per URL so you can verify each one accurately and record the outcome.

Crawled means Googlebot has visited and read the page. Indexed means Google has decided to store the page in its index so it can appear in search results. A page can be crawled but not indexed, for example if it is low quality, duplicate, or blocked from indexing with a noindex directive.

Common reasons include a noindex directive or robots.txt block, low content quality or thin content, duplicate content, crawl budget limitations on very large sites, new pages that have not been discovered yet, manual actions or security issues, or the page being orphaned with no internal links pointing to it.