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Official statement

The listings of submitted URLs in Search Console can be viewed by any owner as long as the submission was made correctly.
43:18
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 53:42 💬 EN 📅 03/05/2018 ✂ 18 statements
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📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that all Search Console owners can view submitted URLs via the inspection tool, provided the submission has been made correctly. This transparency allows for submission activity auditing, but raises questions about individual traceability. For an SEO manager, this means that it is possible to monitor the team's indexing requests without necessarily identifying who submitted what.

What you need to understand

What does "correctly submitted" really mean?

Mueller remains deliberately vague on this point. It is assumed to refer to technically valid submissions through the Search Console, as opposed to failed or misformatted requests.

In practice, this concerns URLs submitted via the URL inspection tool or declared XML sitemaps. The phrasing leaves room for interpretation: Google does not specify if a "correct submission" requires the URL to be crawled or indexed, or simply that it was sent without technical error.

Do all owners really have the same level of access?

Yes, that is the principle of Search Console. A "full" owner has the same viewing rights as any other full owner, regardless of who made the submission.

This implies that a newly added owner can view the history of past submissions. No individual isolation exists: if five people have access as owners, each sees the same overall activity data.

Does this feature really resolve any concrete SEO issues?

Partially. The ability to view submitted URLs allows for identifying duplicate submissions, unnecessary indexing requests, or orphan URLs mistakenly pushed live.

The main shortcoming remains the lack of attribution metadata: you can see that a URL has been submitted, but not who did it or why. For a multi-contributor team, this creates a blind spot.

  • Shared transparency: all owners see the same submissions
  • No individual traceability: it is impossible to identify the author of a submission
  • Depends on permission level: only full owners have this access
  • Limited history: Google does not indefinitely store this data

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices?

Yes, it confirms what is already seen in the field. All owners of a Search Console share the same view of URLs submitted via the inspection tool.

The issue is that Mueller does not specify the retention period of this history. On some properties, it has been observed that submission data disappears after a few months, making retrospective auditing impossible. [To be verified]: the exact retention period varies without clear official documentation.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

The distinction between "viewing" and "identifying the author" is crucial. You can see that a URL has been submitted, but the Search Console will never tell you who clicked the "Request Indexing" button.

For an agency managing multiple client accounts, this poses a real issue of accountability. It is impossible to trace a manipulation error to a specific team member without resorting to third-party tools or external logs.

Attention: If you manage an SEO team with multiple contributors who have owner access to the Search Console, establish an external documentation process for submissions. Google does not provide any individual audit trail.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

Users with restricted permissions ("limited access user" or "associate") do not necessarily see the same data. Google applies a hierarchy of rights, but the public documentation remains vague on the exact nuances.

Additionally, if a submission fails on the server side (500 error, timeout, etc.), it may never appear in the interface. "Correctly submitted" therefore excludes technical failures, without the user always being informed of this failure.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should be done concretely to monitor submissions?

Establish an external tracking register: a simple shared spreadsheet where each URL submission is manually logged with the date, author, and reason. It’s basic, but it’s the only way to have real traceability.

Alternatively, use the Search Console API to regularly export submission data and cross-reference it with your own activity logs. Automation avoids human forgetfulness, but requires some development.

What mistakes should be avoided when submitting URLs?

Do not overwhelm Google with unnecessary indexing requests. Submitting 500 URLs at once because they do not appear in the index within 48 hours is counterproductive and creates noise.

Also avoid submitting URLs blocked by robots.txt or marked as noindex: the Search Console will accept the request, but Google will do nothing. You are wasting a potentially limited quota (Google has never confirmed a strict limit, but slowdowns are observed beyond a few dozen submissions daily).

How can I check that my team is using this tool correctly?

Organize quarterly submission audits: export the submitted URLs, compare them with your strategic indexing plan, and identify anomalies. An orphan URL mistakenly pushed live can reveal a process issue.

Train your teams on best practices: only submit priority URLs, new or recently updated ones, and never en masse without documented reasoning. Quality takes precedence over quantity.

  • Create a shared tracking register for submissions with author and date
  • Limit owner access to strictly necessary personnel
  • Automate the export of submission data via the Search Console API
  • Only submit strategic URLs, not the entire site
  • Quarterly audit submissions to spot errors
The transparency of submissions in the Search Console is useful for overseeing overall activity, but the lack of individual traceability necessitates rigorous internal processes. If your team is large or if you manage multiple complex sites, these optimizations can quickly become time-consuming. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can help structure these workflows, automate audits, and ensure that each submission aligns with a coherent indexing strategy.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je voir qui dans mon équipe a soumis une URL spécifique dans la Search Console ?
Non, Google ne fournit aucune information sur l'identité de la personne ayant effectué une soumission. Tous les propriétaires voient les mêmes données globales sans attribution individuelle.
Combien de temps Google conserve-t-il l'historique des soumissions d'URLs ?
Google n'a jamais documenté officiellement la durée de rétention. Des observations terrain suggèrent quelques mois, mais cela varie selon les propriétés sans règle claire.
Un utilisateur avec accès limité peut-il voir les URLs soumises par d'autres ?
Cela dépend du niveau de permission exact. Seuls les propriétaires complets ont accès à l'intégralité des données de soumission. Les permissions restreintes limitent généralement cette visibilité.
Y a-t-il une limite au nombre d'URLs que je peux soumettre par jour ?
Google n'a jamais confirmé de quota strict, mais des ralentissements et refus temporaires sont observés au-delà de quelques dizaines de soumissions quotidiennes. La modération est conseillée.
Si une soumission échoue techniquement, apparaît-elle quand même dans l'historique ?
Non, seule une "entrée effectuée correctement" est visible. Les erreurs serveur ou les requêtes mal formatées ne laissent généralement aucune trace dans l'interface.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO Domain Name Search Console

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