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Google’s mobile-first indexing now powers over half of Google’s search results

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Google issued an update on the status of its mobile-first indexing initiative.

Google announced Wednesday that over half of the pages shown in search results globally are from Google indexing that content using mobile-first indexing procedure. That means that it is more likely that the pages you visit from a Google search are based on how Google crawled and indexed that content based on the mobile version of that page.

What is mobile-first indexing? Mobile-first indexing is simply how Google crawls and indexes the web. Instead of looking at the desktop version of the page, Google looks at the mobile version of the page. In more simple terms, Google is crawling and indexing your web page based on how it renders on a mobile phone versus a desktop computer.

Where can I learn more? We have many stories and articles about mobile-first indexing on this site. Here are some of the more important stories:

  • Google makes some clarifications related to mobile-first indexing
  • Google begins rolling out mobile-first indexing to more sites
  • FAQ: All about the Google mobile-first index
  • Google begins mobile-first indexing, using mobile content for all search rankings

You can also learn more from this Google help document and more articles on this site.

More advice. Google will typically notify you when your site has moved to mobile-first indexing within Google Search Console. So make sure to check your messages in the Google Search Console. Google will also label your site as last crawled by the Googlebot smartphone useragent in the URL inspection tool as another signal that your site has moved over.

Google says you should pay attention to your structured data and alt-text for images on mobile pages with this change. – Read more

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