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How to index pages faster

How to Index Shopify Pages Fast (Fix "Not Indexed" Issues in 2026)

If your Shopify pages aren't showing on Google, you're losing traffic and sales.

Many Shopify stores struggle with indexing — especially product and collection pages. Google may crawl your pages but never add them to the index.

In this guide, you'll learn how to fix Shopify indexing issues and get your pages indexed faster.

How to index Shopify pages fast

Use this checklist first, then read the sections below for Shopify-specific detail.

  • Submit your sitemap in Google Search Console
  • Improve internal linking between products, collections, and content
  • Fix duplicate content and weak canonical signals
  • Request indexing manually for critical URLs when needed
  • Use an indexing tool to automate submissions at scale

Get Shopify URLs indexed sooner

Index your Shopify pages in minutes — not weeks — once sitemaps, canonicals, and internal links point Google at the URLs you actually want in search results.

GoIndexed connects to Search Console and uses Google's supported indexing workflows so you are not stuck refreshing URL Inspection for every SKU.

Why Shopify pages don't get indexed

Shopify is not “bad for SEO,” but the platform defaults can create a lot of similar URLs and thin states. Google still has to crawl, render, and choose what to index under a finite crawl budget.

  • Crawl budget issues when faceted navigation, tags, and duplicate product paths multiply crawlable URLs
  • Duplicate content across product variants, parameters, and syndicated descriptions
  • Weak internal linking from blogs and collections to new or seasonal SKUs
  • Poor sitemap hygiene: stale URLs, excluded templates, or misaligned canonicals in sitemap.xml

Why Shopify is harder to index than a simple brochure site

A five-page marketing site has few URLs and obvious internal links. A growing Shopify catalog adds hundreds of product URLs, collection permutations, and app-injected endpoints.

Google may crawl many of those URLs yet still decline to index them if they look thin, duplicative, or less useful than URLs already in the index. Technical SEO Shopify work is mostly about shrinking that surface area and strengthening the winners.

Crawled – currently not indexed (Shopify specific)

When Search Console shows Crawled – currently not indexed, Google fetched the URL but decided not to keep it in the index right now. On Shopify, this often tracks back to duplicate or near-duplicate product and collection templates, weak differentiation, or internal links that point bots at low-value faceted URLs instead of canonical products.

Fix the template and linking pattern for the product type, not just one URL — the same issue usually repeats across many SKUs.

How to check if your Shopify pages are indexed

You can check indexing in two ways:

  1. Google Search Console

    Open Pages → Indexing (or the relevant indexing report for your property).

    Look for clusters such as "Crawled – currently not indexed" and inspect sample URLs.

    Compare user-declared canonicals with Google-selected canonicals when duplicates exist.

  2. Site: operator

    Run a search for a specific product or collection handle, for example:

    site:yourstore.com "product name"

5 ways to index Shopify pages faster

  1. Submit your sitemap correctly

    Confirm sitemap.xml is submitted in Search Console and returns only URLs you want discovered.

    After bulk catalog changes, ping or rely on Shopify's sitemap refresh and recheck coverage.

  2. Use internal linking

    Link new products from relevant collections, the homepage, and blog posts so Google sees importance signals early.

  3. Improve page quality

    Avoid thin or duplicate descriptions; add helpful specs, FAQs, and unique copy so product pages justify a separate index entry.

  4. Request indexing manually

    Use URL Inspection for launches and hero SKUs — but expect indexing delay and strict quotas when you try to do this for every variant.

  5. Use an indexing tool (fastest method)

    Manual indexing does not scale when you ship dozens or hundreds of URLs.

    Automation submits batches through supported channels after your store signals are clean.

Manual vs automated indexing

Manual URL Inspection is fine for a handful of strategic pages. It breaks down for large catalogs, flash sales, and frequent restocks because each request waits in the same crawl and indexing delay queues as everything else on the web.

Automated indexing does not replace technical SEO: it amplifies it. You still fix duplicates, sitemaps, and internal links — then you use tooling to push the corrected URLs through faster instead of babysitting Search Console all day.

How to automatically index Shopify pages (best method)

Make your catalog fully indexable: this section assumes you already trimmed duplicate paths and improved internal links.

Automatically submit hundreds of Shopify URLs to Google in one workflow instead of repeating URL Inspection for every product.

Stop waiting for Google to discover every launch: combine a clean sitemap.xml with bulk submissions so indexing delay does not cost you launch-week revenue.

  • Connect Search Console and select the URLs or templates you want prioritized after a deploy
  • Trigger supported indexing requests in bulk after sitemap and canonical fixes land
  • Monitor which products move from Crawled – currently not indexed into Live coverage
  • Typical pattern: a new collection drops 40+ URLs — teams batch-submit after linking the collection from home and top collections instead of clicking Inspect forty times

Common Shopify indexing issues (and fixes)

  • Crawled – currently not indexed: strengthen uniqueness, internal links, and canonicals; see the Shopify-specific section above.
  • Products not appearing in search: check robots.txt, noindex apps, and duplicate handles competing for the same query.
  • Sitemap not updating: verify Online Store → navigation / sitemap settings, removed products still listed, or apps injecting conflicting sitemaps.
  • Collection shells with zero results: noindex or block until inventory exists so crawl budget is not wasted.

Start indexing your Shopify pages faster

Stores from single-brand DTC to multi-collection catalogs use GoIndexed when Search Console shows widespread not-indexed states after migrations or launches.

Pair Search Console monitoring with bulk submissions so you can see before/after movement on representative URLs without living inside URL Inspection.

Automatically submit Shopify URLs and shorten indexing delay with GoIndexed — built for technical Shopify SEO teams who ship often.

FAQ

How long does Shopify indexing take?

Without fixes, indexing delay can stretch from days to weeks. Clean sitemaps, internal links, and bulk submissions usually shorten the window for new URLs.

Why are my Shopify products not indexed?

Often duplicate or thin templates, crawl budget going to low-value URLs, weak internal linking, or sitemap and canonical issues — not because Shopify blocks Google.

What is the fastest way to index Shopify pages?

Fix technical duplicates and linking, then use an indexing automation tool aligned with Search Console so you are not limited to one-off manual requests.

Does the Google indexing API replace good SEO?

No. Indexing APIs and tools notify Google about URLs you want processed; they do not replace quality content, canonical discipline, or sitemap hygiene.

Related guides

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