Calculate your index coverage ratio by comparing indexed pages to submitted pages. Identify indexing issues and estimate the impact on organic traffic potential.
Not every page you submit to search engines gets indexed. Google evaluates each page for quality, uniqueness, and crawlability before deciding whether to add it to its index. Understanding the ratio between submitted and indexed pages reveals how efficiently your content is being indexed and highlights potential quality or technical issues.
This calculator computes your index coverage ratio and estimates the organic traffic you're missing from unindexed pages. It also helps you categorize indexing failures by common causes: thin content, duplicate content, crawl errors, and noindex directives.
A low index ratio often signals systemic problems that, once fixed, can unlock significant traffic growth from pages that already exist on your site but aren't appearing in search results.
By calculating this metric accurately, digital marketers gain actionable insights that inform content strategy, audience targeting, and campaign optimization across all channels. Understanding this metric in precise terms allows marketing professionals to set realistic goals, track progress effectively, and refine their approach based on real performance data.
If Google chooses not to index your pages, they generate zero organic traffic. This calculator identifies how many pages are being left out and quantifies the traffic opportunity you're missing, helping prioritize indexing fixes alongside new content creation. Precise quantification supports A/B testing and performance benchmarking, ensuring that optimization efforts are grounded in statistical evidence rather than anecdotal observations alone.
Index Ratio = Indexed Pages / Submitted Pages × 100 Coverage Gap = Submitted − Indexed Quality Rate = (Submitted − Duplicates − Thin) / Submitted × 100 Traffic Lost = Unindexed Pages × Avg Traffic per Indexed Page
Result: Index Ratio: 80% | Gap: 400 pages | Estimated Lost Traffic: 6,000/mo
Indexed: 1,600 / 2,000 = 80%. Gap: 400 unindexed pages. With avg 15 visits/page/month, estimated traffic loss: 400 × 15 = 6,000 visits/month. Duplicate content is the top issue (200 pages), followed by thin content (120) and crawl errors (80).
Google Search Console's Index Coverage report categorizes pages into four groups: Valid (indexed and can appear in search), Valid with warnings (indexed but with issues), Excluded (not indexed, with a reason), and Error (cannot be processed). Each category provides specific reasons that guide your optimization efforts.
A declining index ratio over time can signal that Google is devaluing your content. If Google is choosing not to index new content while previously indexed pages are being dropped, it may indicate a broader quality assessment shift. Monitor trends, not just snapshots.
Your site architecture directly impacts indexing. Pages buried deep in the hierarchy (4+ clicks from homepage) get crawled less frequently. Ensure important content is within 3 clicks of the homepage through category pages, breadcrumbs, and internal linking.
Index coverage is the ratio of pages Google has indexed versus pages you've submitted. Google Search Console breaks this into Valid (indexed), Excluded (not indexed for various reasons), and Error (couldn't be indexed). Only indexed pages can appear in search results.
Common reasons include duplicate content (Google picks one canonical), thin content (not enough unique value), crawl errors (404, 5xx), noindex directives, orphan pages (no internal links), and crawl budget limitations. Google may also decline to index pages it deems low-quality.
For quality content, aim for 90–95%+ index coverage. Some exclusions are expected (paginated pages, filtered URLs, parameter variations). Below 80% suggests systematic issues that need investigation. Below 60% indicates serious crawling or quality problems.
Fix technical issues (crawl errors, redirect chains). Remove or improve thin content. Add canonical tags for duplicates. Strengthen internal linking to orphan pages. Submit an updated sitemap. For new or changed content, use URL Inspection tool to request indexing.
Unindexed content doesn't directly hurt rankings of indexed pages. However, a large number of low-quality unindexed pages can waste crawl budget and may signal to Google that the overall site quality is lower. It's better to have fewer, higher-quality pages all indexed.
New pages on established sites typically get indexed within 1—2 weeks. New sites may take 4–8 weeks. High-authority sites with frequent publishing can see indexing within hours. Submitting a sitemap and using URL Inspection in Search Console can accelerate the process.