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Official statement

If an indexed page appears as 'not submitted in the sitemap' even though it is, it may simply be a processing delay. If this persists, use the feedback in Search Console.
355:23
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1076h29 💬 EN 📅 25/02/2021 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube (355:23) →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. 57:45 Soumettre un sitemap garantit-il vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
  2. 60:30 Votre site n'est pas indexé mais aucun problème technique n'est détecté : faut-il vraiment blâmer la qualité du contenu ?
  3. 145:32 Les rapports de crawl suffisent-ils vraiment à diagnostiquer vos problèmes d'indexation ?
  4. 147:47 Les erreurs de crawl bloquent-elles vraiment l'indexation de vos contenus ?
  5. 260:15 Google désindexe-t-il vraiment vos pages obsolètes pour protéger votre site ?
  6. 315:31 Pourquoi l'alerte 'contenu vide' dans Search Console cache-t-elle souvent un problème de redirection ?
  7. 376:17 Faut-il vraiment attendre que Google bascule votre site en mobile-first indexing ?
  8. 432:28 Le contenu dupliqué entraîne-t-il vraiment une pénalité Google ?
  9. 451:19 La DMCA suffit-elle vraiment à protéger vos contenus du scraping ?
  10. 532:36 Pourquoi Google peut-il classer un site tiers avant le site officiel d'une marque ?
  11. 630:10 Faut-il vraiment baliser les réviseurs d'articles pour le SEO ?
  12. 714:26 Search Console efface-t-elle vraiment toutes vos données historiques avant vérification ?
  13. 771:59 Peut-on vraiment dupliquer le contenu de son site web sur sa fiche Google Business Profile sans risquer de pénalité SEO ?
  14. 835:21 Les interstitiels cookies et légaux pénalisent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that a delay may exist between the actual submission of a sitemap and its display in Search Console. An indexed page marked 'not submitted in the sitemap' often relates to a simple data processing delay on Google's side. If the status persists for several weeks, using the Search Console feedback tool becomes the recommended recourse to report the inconsistency.

What you need to understand

What does this time delay in Search Console actually mean?

When a page appears indexed but marked as missing from the sitemap, the first reflex is often to check the XML file. However, Google acknowledges that a technical delay can distort the display in Search Console.

This delay occurs between the moment when Googlebot fetches the sitemap and when the user interface reflects this information. Google’s internal systems are not synchronized in real time — a point rarely explained publicly.

How long does this processing delay last?

Google does not provide any precise figures. The term 'processing delay' remains deliberately vague. In practical terms, this delay can range from a few days to several weeks depending on the site's size and crawl frequency.

For a site crawled daily, waiting 48-72 hours seems reasonable. On a less prioritized site in the crawl budget, the delay can extend to 15-20 days without indicating malfunction.

When should you really worry about this status?

The critical threshold lies around 3 to 4 weeks after submitting the sitemap. If the inconsistency persists beyond that, Google recommends using the feedback system integrated into Search Console.

Before alerting Google, make sure the sitemap is accessible (HTTP code 200), correctly formatted (XML validation), and that the concerned URLs are indeed listed in the file. An error on your part remains more likely than a bug on Google's side.

  • A synchronization delay between sitemap crawl and Search Console display is normal
  • This delay varies according to the crawl priority assigned to your site
  • Wait for 3-4 weeks minimum before reporting a persistent anomaly
  • Check the technical accessibility of the sitemap (200, valid XML, URLs present) before any alerts
  • The Search Console feedback is the official channel for reporting lasting inconsistencies

SEO Expert opinion

Is Google's explanation consistent with what is observed in the field?

Yes, but it remains frustrating due to its lack of precision. SEO practitioners do indeed observe regular delays between the technical reality of a site and its reflection in Search Console. Google admits here what has been suspected: the different systems do not communicate instantly.

The problem is the total absence of a clear time frame. 'Processing delay' can mean 3 days or 5 weeks. This imprecision complicates diagnostics: when does a 'normal delay' become a 'real problem'? [To be checked] on your own sites by logging submission and display dates.

What are the limitations of this official explanation?

Google does not address cases where the sitemap is partially processed. Regularly, we see sitemaps of 10,000 URLs where 8,000 are recognized and 2,000 remain 'not submitted' for months. The 'processing delay' does not explain this selectivity.

Another dead end: Google says nothing about the actual impact of this status. Does an indexed page marked 'not submitted' suffer a handicap in crawling or ranking? Probably not if it is already indexed, but the lack of clear confirmation leaves doubt. In practice, if your critical pages are indexed and ranking, this Search Console status is more of a cosmetic hygiene issue than a blocking problem.

In which cases does this 'delay' hide a real malfunction?

When the pattern consistently repeats on the same types of pages. If all your recent product pages display 'not submitted' while the older ones are fine, the problem is probably not a delay but a structural error (non-standardized dynamic URLs, conflicting canonicals, blocking robots.txt).

Similarly, if your sitemap index references several sub-sitemaps but only one is constantly ignored, look for a targeted technical problem (incorrect encoding, server timeout on this specific file). Google's delay does not explain such a marked asymmetry.

Warning: Do not confuse 'not submitted in the sitemap' with 'detected but not indexed.' The former is a display delay that is often benign, while the latter signals a real blockage to indexing (duplicate, thin content, accidental noindex).

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do in response to this status in Search Console?

First, do not panic immediately. If the page is indexed and accessible in search results (test: site:yoururl.com), the 'not submitted' status is a cosmetic issue in the short term. Note the date of observation and wait 2-3 weeks.

During this time, check three technical points: the sitemap returns a 200 code (no 301, 302, or 404), the XML file is valid (test it in a validator), and the concerned URL is indeed listed in the sitemap with the exact syntax (trailing slash, http vs https, www vs non-www).

What mistakes in interpretation should absolutely be avoided?

Do not repeatedly submit the sitemap in a loop. Resending the same sitemap every 2 days via Search Console does not accelerate anything and may even confuse signals on Google's side. One submission is sufficient; the rest relies on natural crawling.

Avoid also frantically modifying your sitemap to 'force' recognition. If Google has crawled the initial version, changing the structure or order of URLs may reset the processing delay instead of reducing it. Stability > agitation.

How to effectively monitor this type of anomaly over time?

Set up a weekly export of Search Console data via the API or a third-party tool. Log specifically the URLs marked 'discovered but not submitted' with their date of first appearance in this status. After 4 weeks, if the status persists, use the Search Console feedback with dated screenshots.

For e-commerce sites or high-volume sites, automate the comparison between your source sitemap and the Search Console status. A simple Python script can cross-check the two sources and alert about discrepancies of more than 30 days. This monitoring prevents time-consuming manual checks.

  • Wait at least 3 weeks before considering the status as abnormal
  • Check the technical accessibility of the sitemap (200, valid XML, exact URLs)
  • Do not submit the sitemap in a loop — one time is enough
  • Log anomalies with detection date for objective tracking
  • Use Search Console feedback after 4 weeks if the status persists
  • Automate monitoring for high-volume sites (Search Console API + script)
This Search Console display delay is mostly a technical artifact with no direct SEO impact. Urgency only arises if the status persists beyond 4 weeks or affects a large portion of your strategic pages. In all cases, prioritize technical verification on the server side before blaming Google. These diagnostics, combining server data, crawl logs, and Search Console statuses, can be complex to orchestrate alone — the support of a specialized SEO agency can help industrialize this monitoring and prevent false alerts that consume valuable time.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une page indexée marquée « non envoyée dans le sitemap » perd-elle du ranking ?
Non, si la page est indexée et accessible, ce statut Search Console n'impacte pas directement le positionnement. C'est un décalage d'affichage, pas un signal de qualité négatif pour l'algorithme.
Combien de temps dure le délai de traitement mentionné par Google ?
Google ne donne aucun chiffre officiel. Sur le terrain, on observe de 48 heures à 3-4 semaines selon la priorité de crawl du site. Au-delà de 4 semaines, il faut investiguer.
Faut-il soumettre à nouveau le sitemap si le statut persiste ?
Non, soumettre en boucle n'accélère pas le traitement et peut brouiller les signaux. Une seule soumission suffit ; attendez le crawl naturel et utilisez le feedback Search Console après 4 semaines si nécessaire.
Ce statut peut-il signaler un problème de crawl budget ?
Indirectement oui. Si Google met plusieurs semaines à synchroniser le sitemap, cela peut refléter une faible priorité de crawl. Mais le statut en lui-même n'est pas la cause, juste un symptôme visible.
Comment différencier un délai normal d'un vrai bug Google ?
Un délai normal touche quelques URLs de façon dispersée et se résorbe en 2-4 semaines. Un bug se manifeste par un pattern répétitif (toujours la même typologie de pages) ou une asymétrie marquée entre sections du site.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Search Console

🎥 From the same video 14

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1076h29 · published on 25/02/2021

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