Paste multiple URLs and check their indexing status on Google, Bing, or Yahoo in bulk — using site: or URL operators.
URL indexing is when a search engine crawls a web page and adds it to its index database. Without indexing, your pages won't appear in search results. A bulk indexing checker lets you verify the indexing status of dozens of URLs at once, rather than searching for each one manually. This is essential for SEO professionals managing large websites or conducting technical audits.
The most reliable method is using Google's site: operator. When you search site:example.com/page/, Google will return results only from that exact URL if it's indexed. If nothing appears, the page isn't in Google's index. This tool automates that process by building the search query for you and opening it in Google, Bing, or Yahoo. You can instantly see whether each URL has been indexed by checking the search results.
| Scenario | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| After publishing new content | Confirm Google discovered and indexed the new page within a reasonable timeframe |
| After a site migration | Ensure all migrated URLs were re-indexed properly and old URLs were de-indexed |
| During a technical SEO audit | Identify pages that should be indexed but aren't, indicating crawl or indexing issues |
| After submitting to Search Console | Verify the submission resulted in indexing and Google can access your pages |
| After disavowing URLs | Check that toxic pages have been de-indexed after submitting a disavow file |
Google dominates global search with roughly 90% market share, making it the most important index to monitor for most SEO professionals. Bing powers Yahoo search, so checking Bing covers both engines. However, for comprehensive indexing audits, use this tool to check all three engines and compare their indexing status. Some URLs may be indexed in Bing but not Google, and vice versa, revealing potential crawlability or indexing issues.
The site: operator (e.g., site:example.com/page) searches Google's index for that specific URL on the specified domain. This is the standard method for checking if a page is indexed. The URL-only option searches for the plain URL string across the entire web, which can surface whether that URL appears in other contexts or on different domains. For straightforward indexing checks, always use the site: operator since it's the most accurate and reliable method.