If your Webflow pages aren’t showing on Google, it’s usually one of a few issues: publishing, sitemap submission, noindex settings, missing internal links, or crawl/redirect problems. This page gives you the exact steps to fix it.
Pro rule: Google won’t “discover” a page with zero links. Internal linking is huge.
In Webflow Designer, publishing a page draft isn’t enough if the overall site isn’t published. Publish your site to push changes live.
Webflow pages can be set to “noindex” or excluded from sitemap. If that’s on, Google will ignore it.
Webflow generates a sitemap automatically when enabled. Submit it in Google Search Console.
https://qix.studio/sitemap.xml
If you already submitted once, resubmitting is fine.
Put links to the new page from your homepage, footer, or a related pillar page. This helps Google discover it faster.
If old URLs return 404, Google crawls junk. Redirect old paths to the best matching pages.
In Search Console, use URL Inspection and “Request indexing” for your important pages. Don’t spam it—use it for high-value pages.
Usually means the page has low priority or weak internal linking. Add internal links and improve content depth.
Often means content is thin, duplicate, or not useful enough. Add FAQ, examples, screenshots, and clear intent.
Google thinks another page is the “main” version. Make sure your canonical points to the exact final URL.
That’s normal if you redirected old URLs. Just make sure the destination page is indexable and linked.
Add internal links from your homepage + from your “Webflow SEO” pillar page to this page. Then request indexing for this page in Search Console.
We set up Search Console, clean sitemaps, fix redirects, and build pillar pages so your Webflow site can actually rank.