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    4. Old URL that has been 301'd for months appearing in SERPs

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    Old URL that has been 301'd for months appearing in SERPs

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    • seoaustin
      seoaustin Subscriber last edited by

      We created a more keyword friendly url with dashes instead of underscores in December.  That new URL is in Google's Index and has a few links to it naturally.  The previous version of the URL (with underscores) continues to rear it's ugly head in the SERPs, though when you click on it you are 301'd to the new url.  The 301 is implemented correctly and checked out on sites such as http://www.redirect-checker.org/index.php.

      Has anyone else experienced such a thing?

      I understand that Google can use it's discretion on pages, title tags, canonicals, etc.... But I've never witnessed them continue to show an old url that has been 301'd to a new for months after discovery or randomly.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • seoaustin
        seoaustin Subscriber @seoaustin last edited by

        Forget it... I know this answer.  I've already fetched the previous url in GSC and it shows as redirected. Google is seeing it properly but for some reason still showing it  in SERPs.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • seoaustin
          seoaustin Subscriber last edited by

          Yes Nicholas, I've done all of that.  As I stated above, the New URL is in Google's Index and has a few links to it naturally.  Yet, months later, we are still seeing the old underscored url, that 301's, show up in the SERP.

          I have to believe this is a bug with the google index vs individual google's page valuation relative to the link graph.  It's as if Google is confused because the legacy, underscored URL has all of the link equity but Googlebot isn't seeing the 301...

          God, maybe that's it.  How do I know if Googlebot is seeing the 301?

          seoaustin 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • NickW816
            NickW816 last edited by

            I have seen this before and and a good way to help google index the new URL is to use Google Search Console. Once you have verified your website in Search Console (is you haven't already), go to the Fetch and Render section, and then imput the new URL and once it is done Fetching and Rendering, push the Request to index button. This should help Google index the new URL faster.

            Nick White
            SEO Services KC
            https://seo-kansas-city.com/

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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