New posts sitting in "Discovered — currently not indexed" for weeks? Check every WordPress URL's index status in bulk, fix the crawl signals that are missing, and resubmit through multiple channels at once.
WordPress (Yoast, Rank Math, or core) auto-generates a sitemap.xml. Paste the URL and IndexFlow pulls every post and page automatically.
IndexFlow checks every URL against Google's index in bulk, flagging posts stuck in "Discovered" or "Crawled — not indexed".
Unindexed URLs get pushed through Google Indexing API, IndexNow, and Bing simultaneously, then re-checked automatically.
WordPress powers over 40% of the web, which means Google's crawlers are constantly triaging an enormous volume of WordPress content. A default WordPress install with a sitemap plugin does the bare minimum: it tells Google a URL exists. It does nothing to convince Google the URL deserves a crawl budget or an index slot. That's why so many WordPress posts sit in "Discovered — currently not indexed" — the URL was found, but never prioritized.
Common WordPress-specific causes: thin category/tag archive pages diluting crawl budget, duplicate content from search/attachment pages, missing internal links from indexed posts to new ones, and slow TTFB on shared hosting that throttles how much Googlebot crawls per visit. Plugins like Yoast and Rank Math fix on-page SEO, but none of them submit URLs to Google or monitor whether indexing actually happened.
IndexFlow closes that gap: import your WordPress sitemap, see index status for every post at a glance, and push the unindexed ones through the Google Indexing API and IndexNow in one batch — instead of submitting each post manually through Search Console.
Yes. Yoast SEO, Rank Math, All in One SEO, and WordPress core sitemaps all produce a standard sitemap.xml — IndexFlow can import from any of them, including sitemap index files that link to multiple sub-sitemaps.
Google found the URL but decided it wasn't worth crawling yet. This usually means weak internal linking, low perceived content value, or crawl budget being spent elsewhere on your site. Submitting through multiple indexing channels and linking to the post from already-indexed pages both help.
Yes. Import your sitemap and IndexFlow checks every URL in bulk — up to 100,000 URLs per batch — instead of checking posts one by one in Search Console.
Yes — migrations are one of the most common use cases. Import the new sitemap, bulk-check which URLs are already indexed under the new domain/URLs, and submit the rest immediately instead of waiting for Google to re-crawl naturally.
Yes, IndexFlow's free plan includes 100 credits/month — enough for most small blogs to monitor and resubmit new posts without paying anything.