Moz Q&A is closed.
After more than 13 years, and tens of thousands of questions, Moz Q&A closed on 12th December 2024. Whilst we’re not completely removing the content - many posts will still be possible to view - we have locked both new posts and new replies. More details here.
What happens to crawled URLs subsequently blocked by robots.txt?
-
We have a very large store with 278,146 individual product pages. Since these are all various sizes and packaging quantities of less than 200 product categories my feeling is that Google would be better off making sure our category pages are indexed.
I would like to block all product pages via robots.txt until we are sure all category pages are indexed, then unblock them. Our product pages rarely change, no ratings or product reviews so there is little reason for a search engine to revisit a product page.
The sales team is afraid blocking a previously indexed product page will result in in it being removed from the Google index and would prefer to submit the categories by hand, 10 per day via requested crawling.
Which is the better practice?
-
@aspenfasteners To my understanding, disallowing a page or folder in robots.txt does not remove pages from Google's index. It merely gives a directive to not crawl those pages/folders. In fact, when pages are accidentally indexed and one wants to remove them from the index, it is important to actually NOT disallow them in robots.txt, so that Google can crawl those pages and discover the meta NOINDEX tags on the pages. The meta NOINDEX tags are the directive to remove a page from the index, or to not index it in the first place. This is different than a robots.txt directive, whcih is intended to allow or disallow crawling. Crawling does not equal indexing.
So, you could keep the pages indexable, and simply block them in your robots.txt file, if you want. If they've already been indexed, they should not disappear quickly (they might, over time though). BUT if they haven't been indexed yet, this would prevent them from being discovered.
All of that said, from reading your notes, I don't think any of this is warranted. The speed at which Google discovers pages on a website is very fast. And existing indexed pages shouldn't really get in the way of new discovery. In fact, they might help the category pages be discovered, if they contain links to the categories.
I would create a categories sitemap xml file, link to that in your robots.txt, and let that do the work of prioritizing the categories for crawling/discovery and indexation.
-
@aspenfasteners to answer your question: "do we KNOW that Google will immediately de-index URL's blocked by robots.txt?"
Google will not immediately de-index URLs that are blocked by robots.txt, based on my experience. I've dealt with very similar situation but with much greater scale - around 8M automatically generated pages that got into Google index. It may take a year or more to de-index these pages completely. Of course, every case is different, but based on my understanding, if you block these low-quality product pages, Google will slowly start re-evaluating these pages, and it will start with the ones that get some traffic.
Here is what happens when Google re-evaluates your individual product pages:
When deciding, whether to keep a page in its index or not, Google takes into account multiple factors, and one of the most important ones is how many backlinks (both internal and external) are leading to a page. Other factors - content quality, if the page is similar or duplicate to another page, Core Web Vitals score, amount of your crawl budget, and, of course, external backlinks (which is irrelevant for your case).
If you are afraid of loosing some traffic that comes to these product pages, or you have other concerns, just do a smaller experiment: take a sample of 1000-2000 pages, block them in robots.txt or by adding meta robots "noindex, follow" directive, and observe Google's reaction in 1-6 weeks, depending on your crawl budget.
Another thing to check:
If you use Screaming Frog, it has a nice feature to show internal pagerank and the number of internal incoming links that lead to every page. As a rule of thumb, if an individual product page has at least 10 internal incoming links from canonicalized pages, there is a high probability it will get indexed.
-
@terentyev - sorry, can't edit my questions once submitted and I wait for approval (why?) the statement should read my question SHOULD be very specific, whereas my original question was much more general - you answered that question very nicely. Sorry for any misunderstanding
-
@terentyev thanks for the reply. We have no reason to believe these URL's are backlinked. These aren't consumer products that individual are interested in, our site is a wholesale B2B selling very narrow categories in bulk quantities typically for manufacturing. Therefore, almost zero chance for backlinks anywhere for something as specific as a particular size/material/package quantity of a product.
We have already initiated a canonicalization project started but we are stuck between two concerns from sales, 1) we can't wait for canonicalization (which is complex) we need sales now and 2) don't touch robots.txt because MAYBE the individual products are indexed.
So that is why my question is very specific - do we KNOW that Google will immediately de-index URL's blocked by robots.txt?
-
@aspenfasteners thanks for interesting question.
to summarize my understanding:- you have ~300K individual product pages, many of them are duplicates; eg. a single product can have multiple characteristics (eg. size or quantity) but the pages are essentially the same.
- your goal is to index 200 product categories that contain a collection of these products, and remove the low-quality duplicate individual pages from Google index in the long run.
- my assumption is that these 300K product pages have been historically accumulating some backlinks, which is one of the reasons why they are indexed.
If I am right about the 1 and 2, then you should not block these individual product pages, but rather add canonical URLs to them, which should point to the respective category page that you want to get indexed.
Once you have these canonicals implemented, you should wait for a few months or more for Google to pass the link equity to your 200 product category pages, and once it is done, you are free to block them from indexing on robots.txt + meta tag on the page itself, and maybe even x-robots-tag. The way how to block them - it is a different discussion. Let me know if you want to learn more on the best approach.
So, here is my checklist for this URL migration:
- add canonicals pointing from product pages to category pages.
- make sure that all category pages are well interlinked between each other, and the individual product pages are linked to several category pages (eg. a product A should be linked to category A, and also to similar categories B & C). As a rule of thumb, make sure that each category page has at least 10 incoming links from other category pages.
- Make sure that all these category pages are linked from your homepage
- Make sure that sitemap contains only self-canonicalized pages.
- Make sure that these category pages have good core web vitals metrics, compared to your competitors on SERP.
- In 2-3 months, when you see that Google indexes the category pages, and crawling of product pages have been reduced significantly, and the ranks of the category pages have gone up, it is ok to block these 300K pages from crawling.
As to manually submitting the categories by hand, I doubt it will help, especially if the product pages have a lot of backlinks. I've seen many cases when Google disregards the robots.txt directives if a page has good backlinks and traffic.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Mass URL changes and redirecting those old URLS to the new. What is SEO Risk and best practices?
Hello good people of the MOZ community, I am looking to do a mass edit of URLS on content pages within our sites. The way these were initially setup was to be unique by having the date in the URL which was a few years ago and can make evergreen content now seem dated. The new URLS would follow a better folder path style naming convention and would be way better URLS overall. Some examples of the **old **URLS would be https://www.inlineskates.com/Buying-Guide-for-Inline-Skates/buying-guide-9-17-2012,default,pg.html
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | kirin44355
https://www.inlineskates.com/Buying-Guide-for-Kids-Inline-Skates/buying-guide-11-13-2012,default,pg.html
https://www.inlineskates.com/Buying-Guide-for-Inline-Hockey-Skates/buying-guide-9-3-2012,default,pg.html
https://www.inlineskates.com/Buying-Guide-for-Aggressive-Skates/buying-guide-7-19-2012,default,pg.html The new URLS would look like this which would be a great improvement https://www.inlineskates.com/Learn/Buying-Guide-for-Inline-Skates,default,pg.html
https://www.inlineskates.com/Learn/Buying-Guide-for-Kids-Inline-Skates,default,pg.html
https://www.inlineskates.com/Learn/Buying-Guide-for-Inline-Hockey-Skates,default,pg.html
https://www.inlineskates.com/Learn/Buying-Guide-for-Aggressive-Skates,default,pg.html My worry is that we do rank fairly well organically for some of the content and don't want to anger the google machine. The way I would be doing the process would be to edit the URLS to the new layout, then do the redirect for them and push live. Is there a great SEO risk to doing this?
Is there a way to do a mass "Fetch as googlebot" to reindex these if I do say 50 a day? I only see the ability to do 1 URL at a time in the webmaster backend.
Is there anything else I am missing? I believe this change would overall be good in the long run but do not want to take a huge hit initially by doing something incorrectly. This would be done on 5- to a couple hundred links across various sites I manage. Thanks in advance,
Chris Gorski0 -
What does Disallow: /french-wines/?* actually do - robots.txt
Hello Mozzers - Just wondering what this robots.txt instruction means: Disallow: /french-wines/?* Does it stop Googlebot crawling and indexing URLs in that "French Wines" folder - specifically the URLs that include a question mark? Would it stop the crawling of deeper folders - e.g. /french-wines/rhone-region/ that include a question mark in their URL? I think this has been done to block URLs containing query strings. Thanks, Luke
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | McTaggart0 -
Wildcarding Robots.txt for Particular Word in URL
Hey All, So I know that this isn't a standard robots.txt, I'm aware of how to block or wildcard certain folders but I'm wondering whether it's possible to block all URL's with a certain word in it? We have a client that was hacked a year ago and now they want us to help remove some of the pages that were being autogenerated with the word "viagra" in it. I saw this article and tried implementing it https://builtvisible.com/wildcards-in-robots-txt/ and it seems that I've been able to remove some of the URL's (although I can't confirm yet until I do a full pull of the SERPs on the domain). However, when I test certain URL's inside of WMT it still says that they are allowed which makes me think that it's not working fully or working at all. In this case these are the lines I've added to the robots.txt Disallow: /*&viagra Disallow: /*&Viagra I know I have the solution of individually requesting URL's to be removed from the index but I want to see if anybody has every had success with wildcarding URL's with a certain word in their robots.txt? The individual URL route could be very tedious. Thanks! Jon
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | EvansHunt0 -
Replace dynamic paramenter URLs with static Landing Page URL - faceted navigation
Hi there, got a quick question regarding faceted navigation. If a specific filter (facet) seems to be quite popular for visitors. Does it make sense to replace a dynamic URL e.x http://www.domain.com/pants.html?a_type=239 by a static, more SEO friendly URL e.x http://www.domain.com/pants/levis-pants.html by creating a proper landing page for it. I know, that it is nearly impossible to replace all variations of this parameter URLs by static ones but does it generally make sense to do this for the most popular facets choose by visitors. Or does this cause any issues? Any help is much appreciated. Thanks a lot in advance
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | ennovators0 -
Does Google Read URL's if they include a # tag? Re: SEO Value of Clean Url's
An ECWID rep stated in regards to an inquiry about how the ECWID url's are not customizable, that "an important thing is that it doesn't matter what these URLs look like, because search engines don't read anything after that # in URLs. " Example http://www.runningboards4less.com/general-motors#!/Classic-Pro-Series-Extruded-2/p/28043025/category=6593891 Basically all of this: #!/Classic-Pro-Series-Extruded-2/p/28043025/category=6593891 That is a snippet out of a conversation where ECWID said that dirty urls don't matter beyond a hashtag... Is that true? I haven't found any rule that Google or other search engines (Google is really the most important) don't index, read, or place value on the part of the url after a # tag.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Atlanta-SMO0 -
How to Disallow Tag Pages With Robot.txt
Hi i have a site which i'm dealing with that has tag pages for instant - http://www.domain.com/news/?tag=choice How can i exclude these tag pages (about 20+ being crawled and indexed by the search engines with robot.txt Also sometimes they're created dynamically so i want something which automatically excludes tage pages from being crawled and indexed. Any suggestions? Cheers, Mark
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | monster990 -
Robots.txt is blocking Wordpress Pages from Googlebot?
I have a robots.txt file on my server, which I did not develop, it was done by the web designer at the company before me. Then there is a word press plugin that generates a robots.txt file. How Do I unblock all the wordpress pages from googlebot?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | ENSO0 -
Best way to block a search engine from crawling a link?
If we have one page on our site that is is only linked to by one other page, what is the best way to block crawler access to that page? I know we could set the link to "nofollow" and that would prevent the crawler from passing any authority, and we can set the page to "noindex" to prevent it from appearing in search results, but what is the best way to prevent the crawler from accessing that one link?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | nicole.healthline0