Official statement
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Google allows you to submit a page directly to the index via 'Fetch as Googlebot', with a limit of 50 submissions per week for individual pages and 10 per month for pages with their internal links. This feature proves particularly effective for forcing rapid re-indexing after the removal of sensitive information or critical changes. The question remains whether these quotas are sufficient to manage a medium-sized site and if this method truly outperforms natural indexing.
What you need to understand
What does 'Fetch as Googlebot' really allow you to do?
This Search Console tool simulates Googlebot's visit to a given URL. It displays the rendered page as the engine sees it, enabling you to detect crawl errors, robots.txt blockages, or JavaScript rendering issues.
But the real novelty lies in the ability to submit the page directly to the index. In other words, you force Google to prioritize processing this URL without waiting for the next natural crawl. It's a fast re-indexing lever that bypasses the usual crawl budget.
In what situations does this direct submission have real value?
First scenario: you just published time-sensitive content (news, flash sale, event). Waiting 48 hours for Googlebot to revisit can negate the publication's relevance. Forced submission reduces this waiting time to a few hours, sometimes less.
Second critical use case: the removal of sensitive information. Imagine a confidential price, personal data, or a factual error is indexed. This feature allows you to force the index update without going through a URL removal request, which is a much heavier procedure.
Why does Google impose such strict quotas?
50 submissions per week for a single page, 10 per month for a page with its links: these limits are not trivial. They reflect the server cost of forced recrawls and aim to prevent mass abuse that could overload indexing resources.
For a site with 500 pages that are frequently updated, these quotas can quickly become restrictive. You must prioritize strategic URLs and not waste tokens on low-impact pages. It’s a limited resource that needs to be managed like a budget.
- Fast re-indexing possible via direct submission to the index, without waiting for natural crawl
- Limit of 50 submissions/week for a single URL, 10/month for a URL with its internal links
- Priority use cases: removal of sensitive info, urgent content, correction of critical errors
- Quota management essential to prevent exhausting your tokens on secondary pages
- Alternative to crawl budget to push Googlebot’s passage out of the usual cycle
SEO Expert opinion
Is this method really faster than natural indexing?
On sites with a low crawl budget (young sites, less authoritative domains), the difference is remarkable. I've seen pages submitted via Fetch appear in the index in less than 2 hours, compared to 3 to 7 days with passive crawling. For these profiles, it's a significant time saver.
However, on sites crawled multiple times a day (media, established e-commerce), the gap narrows. If Googlebot visits every 6 hours anyway, forcing submission doesn't change much. The real advantage remains the manual prioritization of specific URLs, not raw acceleration.
What are the unspoken limits of this tool?
One point that Google doesn’t openly discuss: submitting a page to the index does not guarantee its indexing. If quality is deemed insufficient, if it duplicates existing content, or if the site is suffering from penalties, the submission does not alter the final verdict. [To be verified] but field reports indicate that 15 to 20% of forced submissions do not result in any visible indexing.
Second limitation: the 10 monthly submissions with internal links. Google never specifies how many links are actually crawled and submitted. On a product page linked to 200 other references, how deep is the crawl? There are no official data. It’s all guesswork.
Should this tool's use be systematic or reserved for emergencies?
Natural temptation: automate submissions after each publication. Bad idea. You’re burning your quota on pages that would have indexed naturally within 48 hours. And you no longer have leeway for real emergencies: data leaks, pricing errors, defamatory content needing urgent correction.
It's better to define a prioritization grid: time-sensitive content (score 10), critical corrections (score 8), new strategic pages (score 6), minor updates (score 2). You only submit scores of 8 or higher. This discipline pays off in the long run.
Practical impact and recommendations
Which pages should you prioritize submitting through this tool?
Focus your tokens on pages with immediate ROI: landing pages for paid campaigns that need to appear organically quickly, news articles with a short lifespan, product pages out of stock that need to be deindexed and then reindexed after restocking.
Another concrete example: corrections of identified duplicate content in urgency. If you've just canonicalized 50 variants of a product sheet, submitting the canonical version speeds up the consolidation of signals and avoids prolonged PageRank dilution.
How can you track the real effectiveness of your submissions?
Don’t rely solely on the Search Console interface that confirms the submission. Check the actual indexing via a site: search within 6 to 12 hours. Track the time between submission and appearance in the index to measure the real gain versus your site's natural crawl.
Set up a tracking table with columns: submitted URL, date/time, type (single or with links), observed indexing delay, impact on organic traffic at D+7. You will quickly identify if certain types of pages benefit more from forced submission than others.
What common mistakes must absolutely be avoided?
Classic error: submitting a page before verifying that it is technically crawlable. If it’s blocked by robots.txt, set to noindex, or inaccessible for Googlebot, the submission consumes a token for nothing. Always test the Fetch render before submitting.
Another pitfall: using the 10 monthly submissions with links on poorly interlinked pages. If your hub page only links to 5 relevant URLs but 200 ancillary URLs (filters, pagination), you waste crawl on low-value content. First optimize the internal linking, then submit.
- Define a clear prioritization grid (urgent content, critical corrections, new strategic pages)
- Check technical crawlability (robots.txt, noindex, redirects) before any submission
- Track real effectiveness with a tracking table (indexing delay, traffic impact)
- Reserve submissions with links for hub pages with well-optimized internal linking
- Never exceed 50% of the weekly quota unless in a proven emergency
- Monthly audit of submitted pages not indexed to identify failure patterns
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je soumettre la même URL plusieurs fois par semaine via Fetch as Googlebot ?
La soumission via Fetch garantit-elle l'indexation de ma page ?
Combien de liens internes sont réellement crawlés lors d'une soumission avec liens ?
Dois-je utiliser cet outil après chaque publication de contenu ?
Quel délai entre la soumission et l'apparition effective dans l'index Google ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 19/08/2011
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