Indexação · 5 min · 2026-05-31

What is indexation and why might a published page not appear on Google?

Indexation means inclusion in a search index. Learn about discovery, crawling, canonicals, sitemaps, and Search Console validation.

IndexationGoogleSitemap

Summary

What matters before moving forward.

  • A live page does not automatically enter the index.
  • Discovery, crawling, and indexation are different stages.
  • Sitemaps, internal links, robots directives, and canonicals should send coherent signals.

Google needs to discover and evaluate the page

First, the search engine finds a URL through links, sitemaps, or other signals. It then crawls the page and decides whether to store it in the index.

Technical problems or weak content can delay or prevent inclusion.

Better indexation is not indiscriminate submission

The priority is ensuring important pages have internal links, correct canonicals, valid HTTP status, and useful content.

Submitting inconsistent URLs creates noise. Clean strategy helps crawlers focus on what matters.

Related next steps

Where to keep exploring or apply this topic.

Proof and validation

  • Validate implementation on the real deployment.
  • Confirm technical signals against official documentation.
  • Measure impact before promising outcomes.

Official documentation

References used to validate this approach.

Technical strategy should be auditable. These sources link directly to the official documentation behind this guide.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this topic.

How long does page indexation take?

It can range from hours to weeks. Discovery, quality, crawl frequency, and technical-signal consistency all matter.

Want to apply this to your site?

Next step Technical audit