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        4. How can I get a list of every url of a site in Google's index?

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        How can I get a list of every url of a site in Google's index?

        Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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        • 94501
          94501 last edited by

          I work on a site that has almost 20,000 urls in its site map. Google WMT claims 28,000 indexed and a search on Google shows 33,000. I'd like to find what the difference is.

          Is there a way to get an excel sheet with every url Google has indexed for a site?

          Thanks... Mike

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • KaneJamison
            KaneJamison last edited by

            If this is still an issue you're facing, have you checked the sitemap settings to see which page types are getting included? For example, a site with a few thousand tags that are not entered in the sitemap but not yet set to noindex could easily produce extra pages like this.

            The next step is parameterization. Anything going on there with search URLs or product URLs? eg ?refid=1235134&q=search+term or ?prod=152134&variant=blue

            If you really want to scrape through Google, get a list of your sitemap and scrape queries like "inurl:domain.com/a", "inurl:domain.com/b", "inurl:domain.com/c". etc. This should allow you to dive deeper into the site map to see what Google really has indexed. For URL subfolders with tons of URLs like domain.com/product/a, you'll want to do the same thing at a subfolder level instead of root URLs.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • KaneJamison
              KaneJamison @94501 last edited by

              You can do that with a tool like Scrapebox or Outwit. Go slow, or else you'll need to use proxies to get Google to respond fast enough. As another commenter mentioned, it's probably against TOS.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DJ123
                DJ123 last edited by

                You could probably write a macro to do this, although just because you could doesn't mean you should.  I don't think it is advisable because you do not want to violate any terms of use for anyone.  That is never a good thing.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • 94501
                  94501 @Kingof5 last edited by

                  Yes, WMT API doesn't have it. The site site:xxxx.com search is where are got one of the two too high numbers. Thanks... Mike

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • 94501
                    94501 @Martijn_Scheijbeler last edited by

                    Hi Marijn,

                    Thanks for the suggestions. 2.5 years of G/A organic landing pages is 10,000 urls.... 1/2 as many as the site map and 1/3rd as many as Google says indexed. On scraping google, do you know of a tool for that?

                    Thanks... Mike

                    KaneJamison 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Kingof5
                      Kingof5 last edited by

                      Might be something you can get from the WMT API.

                      Also, to really see how many pages are indexed, do a site:xxxx.com search, go to the last page, include omitted results, go to the last page again, and add up how many you have. That's probably the most accurate number.

                      94501 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Martijn_Scheijbeler
                        Martijn_Scheijbeler last edited by

                        Hi Mike,

                        There a couple of solutions, neither of them provide you with 100% of data. The best would be to export a list of landing pages from Google Analytics or your favorite web analytics tool segmented by organic search/ Google. This would provide you with a list of pages that received traffic via search and so are indexed. If you cross reference them with your sitemaps that might already help you out a bit. Besides that you could crawl and scrape the URLS for a site:xxx.com search.

                        94501 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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