Website SEO Checker: Find your gaps.
Stop guessing what is wrong with your SEO. Find crawled currently not indexed pages, verify your sitemap, and get a prioritized action plan from our AI.
What our website SEO checker analyses
We start with the sitemap, because it’s the most reliable inventory of pages a site actually wants indexed. From there we build a structural model: URL patterns, depth clusters, lastmod distribution, and per-section page counts. That model is what makes our recommendations specific to your site rather than generic SEO advice.
The analysis covers structure (clusters that look anaemic compared to the rest, isolated orphans, depth anomalies), freshness (sections where content hasn’t moved in years), completeness (URL patterns that suggest a programmatic tier you started but never finished), and SERP opportunity (high-intent keyword clusters where you have a hub but no detail pages).
What makes this different from generic SEO tools
Tools like Ahrefs and SEMrush give you industry benchmarks and per-keyword positions — valuable, but they’re analysing your site from the outside. Our analysis works from the inside out: we treat the sitemap as ground truth and ask what your URL structure tells us about what content you have, what content you’re missing, and what content has gone stale. The output is a list of specific pages to create, fix, or refresh — not a score, not a percentile.
The free tier handles up to 500 URLs and gives a domain-specific recommendation list. The paid tier adds monitoring (we re-audit on a schedule), history (track how the site has changed over time), and AI-generated content briefs for the gaps we find.
What “crawled but not indexed” usually means
The most-asked Google Search Console error has surprisingly mundane causes: thin content, duplicate content with stronger pages elsewhere, or URLs that exist for technical reasons but don’t deserve their own search result. Our analysis identifies all three from sitemap structure alone, before you even open GSC. Read our deep dive on discovered, not indexed for the full taxonomy.