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Official statement

The AMP Test Tool allows you to test a specific page or check a code snippet for issues. However, this tool tests the overall implementation of AMP without specific information regarding indexing by Google.
5:26
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 7:00 💬 EN 📅 20/02/2020 ✂ 4 statements
Watch on YouTube (5:26) →
Other statements from this video 3
  1. 1:41 Comment identifier et corriger efficacement les erreurs AMP dans Search Console ?
  2. 2:44 Les erreurs AMP bloquent-elles vraiment l'indexation dans Google ?
  3. 5:26 Comment Google valide-t-il réellement les corrections AMP après correction ?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google's AMP Test Tool only validates the technical compliance of the AMP code without providing information about the actual indexing of your pages. A successful AMP test does not guarantee that Google will index or display your content in rich results. To check indexing, you need to cross-reference with Search Console, URL inspection, and server logs.

What you need to understand

What is the actual scope of the AMP Test Tool?

The AMP Test Tool focuses on validating the syntax of the AMP code — approved tags, required attributes, valid AMP script. It detects blocking errors like unauthorized JavaScript or incorrectly converted standard HTML tags.

This technical validation remains superficial. The tool does not verify if Google is actually indexing the page, if it appears in Top Stories carousels, or if it benefits from AMP caching. It's a linter, not an indexing diagnostic.

Why does this distinction between validation and indexing matter?

A perfectly compliant AMP code can fail to be indexed for third-party reasons: noindex tag, blocked robots.txt, canonical pointing elsewhere, or detected duplicate content. The AMP Test Tool does not report any of these barriers.

Conversely, pages with minor AMP warnings may index without issue if Google deems the content relevant and the errors non-critical. Technical validation is just an initial filter — not a golden ticket.

What tools complement the AMP Test Tool for a complete diagnosis?

To validate actual indexing, Search Console is indispensable. The AMP report indicates errors encountered during crawling, pages indexed in AMP, and blocking issues detected by Googlebot.

URL inspection allows you to force a live test and verify if Google can access the AMP version, which canonical URL it retains, and if the page is eligible for rich results. Server logs then confirm the actual visits of Googlebot on the AMP URLs.

  • AMP Test Tool: syntax validation of the code, detection of HTML/JavaScript errors
  • Search Console: actual indexing, errors on Google's side, discovered AMP pages
  • URL Inspection: live testing, crawlability diagnostics, eligibility for carousels
  • Server Logs: confirmation of Googlebot crawls on AMP URLs
  • AMP Cache: check that Google caches the AMP version (test via google.com/amp/s/...)

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?

The distinction made by Google is technically accurate but misleading in its phrasing. Practitioners often confuse AMP validation with indexing because Google has long communicated the importance of valid AMP code for accessing Top Stories carousels.

In practice, we regularly observe perfectly compliant AMP pages that never get indexed in AMP — Google prefers the classic desktop version. The reverse is also true: pages with AMP warnings display without issue in rich results. Technical validation is a necessary condition but far from sufficient. [To be verified]: Google does not publish any metrics on the correlation rate between AMP compliance and actual indexing.

What are the undocumented limits of the AMP Test Tool?

The AMP Test Tool ignores several critical dimensions for indexing: it does not simulate the crawl budget allocated to your domain, does not check prioritization directives in the sitemap, and does not test the actual loading speed from the AMP cache.

More problematic: it does not detect canonical conflicts between the AMP version and the desktop version. If your AMP page points to itself in canonical while the desktop points elsewhere, the tool remains silent — but Google will probably ignore the AMP version. These inconsistencies only show up in Search Console, often with several days of delay.

In what cases does AMP validation not guarantee any indexing?

If your site lacks authority or if the content is considered thin by Google, a flawless AMP code will not change anything. Google can crawl the page, technically validate it, then decide not to index it for qualitative reasons — and the AMP Test Tool will say nothing about it.

Sites under algorithmic penalty (Helpful Content Update, detected spam) have their AMP pages technically validated but excluded from rich results. The test tool does not report any signals on these qualitative filters. Let's be honest: technical validation is the bare minimum, not a guaranteed entry ticket.

Warning: Never rely solely on the AMP Test Tool to diagnose indexing issues. Valid code does not mean Google will index the page or that it will appear in carousels. Always cross-reference with Search Console and server logs.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you check if your AMP pages are actually indexed by Google?

Start with an audit in Search Console: AMP report for critical errors, Coverage report for actual indexing. Filter on AMP URLs and look for those marked “Detected, currently not indexed” or “Crawled, currently not indexed” — they pass the technical validation, but Google refuses to index them.

Next, manually test in Google using site:yourdomain.com/amp/specific-url. If the page does not appear even though it is validated by the AMP Test Tool, it's a clear signal of intentional exclusion by Google. Also check the AMP cache by consulting google.com/amp/s/yourdomain.com/amp/url.

What mistakes should be avoided during AMP validation?

Do not settle for a “Valid AMP” in the test tool. Ensure that the canonical of the AMP page correctly points to the corresponding desktop version, and that the desktop version links back to the AMP via rel="amphtml". A mismatch between these two directives creates an orphan in indexing.

Avoid submitting AMP pages in the sitemap without checking that they are accessible to Googlebot. If the robots.txt blocks the path /amp/, the AMP Test Tool will validate the code, but Google will never crawl the URLs. Always test the server-side rendering before submission.

What strategy should be adopted to maximize the indexing of AMP pages?

Prioritize pages with high informational potential for AMP — news, guides, tutorials. Google favors these formats in carousels. Commercial or transactional pages in AMP rarely bring measurable indexing gains.

Monitor the crawl rate of AMP URLs in server logs. If Googlebot visits your desktop pages but systematically ignores the AMP versions, it's a signal of disinterest — no point in continuing to invest time in maintaining AMP code. And this is where it gets tricky: these cross-diagnostic efforts require time and specialized expertise. If your team lacks the resources to continuously monitor AMP indexing, consider delegating to a specialized SEO agency that can automate these checks and quickly correct inconsistencies before they impact your traffic.

  • Validate the AMP code with the Google test tool
  • Check real indexing in Search Console (AMP report + Coverage)
  • Manually test display via site: and the AMP cache
  • Ensure the consistency of canonicals between AMP and desktop
  • Analyze server logs to confirm Googlebot crawls on AMP URLs
  • Monitor exclusions “Crawled, not indexed” specific to AMP pages
The AMP Test Tool validates the code, not the indexing. For a reliable diagnosis, always cross-reference technical validation, Search Console, URL inspection, and server logs. A compliant AMP code is a prerequisite, not a guarantee of indexing.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

L'outil de test AMP remplace-t-il Search Console pour vérifier l'indexation ?
Non. L'outil de test AMP valide uniquement la conformité technique du code. Search Console indique si Google a indexé la page, détecté des erreurs lors du crawl, et si elle est éligible aux résultats enrichis.
Une page marquée « Valid AMP » est-elle forcément indexée par Google ?
Non. La validation technique ne garantit pas l'indexation. Google peut décider de ne pas indexer une page AMP valide pour des raisons de qualité de contenu, budget crawl, ou duplication détectée.
Pourquoi mes pages AMP validées n'apparaissent-elles pas dans les carrousels Top Stories ?
Plusieurs raisons possibles : contenu non éligible (pas d'actualité), manque d'autorité du domaine, erreurs de structured data Article non détectées par l'outil AMP, ou filtre qualitatif appliqué par Google.
Dois-je corriger tous les warnings remontés par l'outil de test AMP ?
Les erreurs critiques bloquent l'indexation — corrigez-les immédiatement. Les warnings peuvent être tolérés si Google indexe déjà la page sans problème. Vérifiez dans Search Console si ces warnings impactent réellement l'indexation.
Comment savoir si Google utilise le cache AMP pour mes pages ?
Testez manuellement l'URL google.com/amp/s/votredomaine.com/chemin. Si la page s'affiche via le cache, Google la considère comme AMP valide et la met en cache. Sinon, vérifiez les erreurs dans Search Console.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing Featured Snippets & SERP AI & SEO Mobile SEO

🎥 From the same video 3

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 7 min · published on 20/02/2020

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