Rapid Index Check

Discovered — Currently Not Indexed

Understanding this Google Search Console status and how to improve your chances of getting crawled and indexed.

What It Means

"Discovered — Currently Not Indexed" means Google knows about your URL through sitemaps, internal links, or external references, but has not yet scheduled or completed a crawl. The URL is in Google's discovery queue but waiting to be processed.

Why Pages Stay in "Discovered"

1. Crawl Budget Limitations

Google allocates a limited number of pages to crawl per site per day. If your site has many pages or frequent changes, some URLs may wait longer in the queue. Large sites with many low-value pages are particularly affected.

2. Low Site Authority

New or low-authority sites often have slower crawl rates. Google prioritizes crawling for established, trusted sites with strong backlink profiles. Building quality backlinks and improving content can increase crawl priority.

3. Technical Crawl Barriers

Even if a page is "discovered," technical issues may delay or prevent crawling: slow server response times, intermittent 5xx errors, complex JavaScript rendering requirements, or poor internal linking structure.

4. Content Quality Signals

Google may deprioritize crawling for pages that appear to have thin content, duplicate content, or low user value based on initial signals from the site and URL patterns.

How to Improve Crawl and Index Chances

Step 1: Ensure Technical Accessibility

Use our Rapid Index Checker to verify: 200 OK status, no noindex tags, robots.txt allows access, canonical is correct, and the page loads quickly.

Step 2: Submit to Google Search Console

Use the URL Inspection tool in GSC to request indexing. This does not guarantee immediate crawling but can help prioritize the URL in the queue.

Step 3: Improve Internal Linking

Link to the page from high-traffic, important pages on your site such as the homepage, main navigation, or popular blog posts. Internal links are a strong signal for discovery and crawl priority.

Step 4: Build Quality Backlinks

External links from reputable sites signal to Google that your page is worth crawling and indexing. Focus on earning links through quality content, outreach, and digital PR.

Step 5: Optimize XML Sitemap

Ensure your sitemap is up-to-date, contains only indexable URLs, and is submitted to Google Search Console. Update the lastmod date when content changes to signal freshness.

Check Crawl Signals

Verify your page has no technical barriers preventing crawling.

Check Crawl Signals

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "Discovered — Currently Not Indexed" mean?

This Google Search Console status means Google knows about the URL (through sitemaps, links, or other discovery methods) but has not yet crawled it. The page is in the queue for crawling but has not been processed.

How long does it take to move from Discovered to Indexed?

There is no fixed timeframe. It can range from hours to weeks depending on site authority, crawl budget, content quality signals, and Google's prioritization of your domain.

Should I be worried about "Discovered — Currently Not Indexed"?

Not immediately. New pages often start in this state. However, if pages remain in this state for weeks or months, it may indicate crawl budget issues, low site authority, or technical problems preventing crawling.

How can I speed up indexing?

Submit the URL through Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool, ensure the page is in your XML sitemap, improve internal linking to the page, build quality backlinks, and ensure the page loads quickly with no technical blockers.