Stop waiting weeks for Google to crawl your WordPress posts, pages, and WooCommerce products. IndexFlow submits every URL through 5 simultaneous channels so Google discovers and indexes your content in hours — not weeks.
100 free URLs/month · No credit card · Works with all WordPress themes and plugins
WordPress makes publishing easy — but getting published content into Google is a separate problem that Yoast and RankMath don't fully solve.
Even if your XML sitemap is perfect, Googlebot allocates a crawl budget per site. New posts on sites with thousands of existing pages can wait weeks before they're crawled — and some are never crawled at all.
WordPress's built-in ping services haven't been updated in years and have limited effectiveness. They ping basic endpoints that carry little weight with Google's modern crawl scheduling.
An updated sitemap tells Google what exists — but doesn't force Googlebot to crawl it. Without an active submission signal, Google may take weeks to recrawl and pick up the new URL.
Large WooCommerce stores with thousands of product pages suffer severe crawl budget fragmentation. New products and updated pages regularly go unindexed for weeks, missing time-sensitive ranking opportunities.
From blog posts to WooCommerce products — any WordPress URL can be fast-indexed.
Submit every new WordPress post immediately on publish. IndexFlow fires 5 submission channels, and most posts on established sites get indexed within 24 hours instead of 1–4 weeks.
Bulk-submit new product pages and updated product URLs. For stores launching seasonal collections, fast indexing means faster ranking before peak traffic periods.
New service pages, campaign pages, and city SEO pages often need to rank quickly. Don't wait for Google's crawl schedule — submit directly and track when they appear in the index.
When you update an existing post with fresh data, Google needs to re-crawl it to reflect the changes in rankings. Re-submit updated URLs through IndexFlow to accelerate recrawl.
Every URL is submitted through Google Indexing API, IndexNow, Bing Webmaster API, RSS/WebSub crawl signals, and 50+ ping services — simultaneously.
Paste a list of WordPress URLs, upload a CSV, or pull from your sitemap. Submit hundreds of posts or product pages in a single batch.
Track which WordPress pages are indexed. Get alerted if a page that was indexed drops out — and auto-resubmit to recover it.
If Google removes a page from its index (happens after plugin errors, robots.txt mistakes, or algorithm updates), IndexFlow catches it and resubmits automatically.
Paste your WordPress sitemap URL and IndexFlow extracts all URLs to check and submit. Great for auditing an entire site's index status in minutes.
Every URL you've ever submitted through IndexFlow is logged with timestamp, submission status, and index confirmation date. Full audit trail for your WordPress site.
Paste your new post URL, upload a CSV list of posts, or use IndexFlow's sitemap import to pull all WordPress URLs at once.
IndexFlow hits Google Indexing API, IndexNow, Bing Webmaster API, WebSub crawl signals, and 50+ ping services simultaneously — in under 1 second.
IndexFlow monitors each URL and updates its status when Google confirms indexing. You get notified when your WordPress post appears in the index.
"I publish 15–20 posts per week. Before IndexFlow, some posts would sit unindexed for 2–3 weeks. Now they're in Google within 24 hours, consistently. My organic traffic grew 40% in 3 months."
David R.
WordPress Blogger
"Our WooCommerce store has 3,000+ products. New seasonal products used to miss their ranking window entirely. With IndexFlow, they're indexed before the campaign launches."
Emma S.
E-Commerce Manager
"I had 200 existing posts that somehow fell out of Google's index after a plugin conflict. IndexFlow's bulk resubmission got 90% of them back indexed within 48 hours."
Kevin M.
Content Site Owner
The most common causes are: (1) Google hasn't allocated crawl budget to your site yet — new sites can wait weeks for Googlebot to visit. (2) Your sitemap exists but no active submission signal has been sent to Google. (3) Your post has no internal links pointing to it, so Google can't discover it via crawl. (4) Googlebot crawled the page but decided not to index it due to thin content, duplicate content, or a noindex tag accidentally applied. IndexFlow addresses the submission side — it sends 5 simultaneous discovery signals so Google gets the URL immediately.
Yes. IndexFlow works independently of any WordPress SEO plugin. Yoast and RankMath generate your sitemaps and handle on-page SEO — IndexFlow handles the URL submission and indexing acceleration. You can use both together: keep your Yoast/RankMath sitemap for Google Search Console, and additionally submit new URLs through IndexFlow for faster crawling.
For established WordPress sites (over 6 months old, with some existing traffic), most posts get indexed within 24–48 hours of IndexFlow submission. For brand-new sites or very new domains, Google may still take 1–2 weeks regardless of submission — Google's trust in the domain affects crawl priority. IndexFlow maximizes the speed given your site's current authority.
Yes. WooCommerce product pages are standard WordPress URLs — just paste them or upload a CSV of your product URLs. Large WooCommerce stores often batch-submit new collection pages when they go live, and re-submit product pages after major updates (price changes, new images, updated descriptions).
Submission accelerates Googlebot's visit to the URL — but indexing depends on Google's assessment of the page quality. If your WordPress post has thin content, is a duplicate, has a noindex meta tag, or is blocked by robots.txt, Google may crawl it but not index it. IndexFlow guarantees the submission signal reaches Google; what Google does with it depends on your content.
Use IndexFlow's bulk index checker: paste all your WordPress URLs and the tool checks each one's index status in Google. You'll see which pages are indexed, which aren't, and which are 'discovered but not indexed.' This is far faster than manually running site: searches for each URL. Most WordPress site audits take 5–10 minutes with bulk checking.
Yes — through IndexFlow's REST API. You can set up a WordPress hook (e.g., post_publish action) to call IndexFlow's API automatically whenever a new post is published. This way, every new post gets submitted within seconds of going live with zero manual work. The API setup takes about 30 minutes with basic PHP/WordPress knowledge.
Yes. IndexFlow uses legitimate submission methods: the Google Indexing API (official Google product), IndexNow (an industry standard), and Bing Webmaster API. There's no cloaking, spam, or manipulation involved — just legitimate URL submission signals. These are the same methods large publications use to get content indexed quickly.