SEO

SEO Site Audit

A systematic evaluation of a website's technical infrastructure, on-page elements, content quality, and backlink profile to identify issues that prevent search engines from crawling, indexing, and ranking pages effectively.

Quick Answer

  • What it is: A systematic evaluation of a website's technical infrastructure, on-page elements, content quality, and backlink profile to identify issues that prevent search engines from crawling, indexing, and ranking pages effectively.
  • Why it matters: Without regular audits, technical debt and content issues silently erode search visibility. Most sites have 50-200 actionable issues at any given time.
  • How to check or improve: Crawl your site with a tool, check Search Console for errors, review Core Web Vitals, audit content quality, and analyze your backlink profile.

When you'd use this

Without regular audits, technical debt and content issues silently erode search visibility. Most sites have 50-200 actionable issues at any given time.

Example scenario

Hypothetical scenario (not a real company)

A team might use SEO Site Audit when Crawl your site with a tool, check Search Console for errors, review Core Web Vitals, audit content quality, and analyze your backlink profile.

Common mistakes

  • Confusing SEO Site Audit with Crawlability: Crawlability is a core SEO concept that influences how search engines evaluate, surface, or interpret pages.
  • Confusing SEO Site Audit with Indexability: The ability of a web page to be added to a search engine's index, determined by technical factors like robots directives, canonical tags, and crawlability.
  • Confusing SEO Site Audit with Core Web Vitals: A set of three specific metrics that Google uses to measure user experience on websites: loading performance (LCP), interactivity (INP), and visual stability (CLS). Learn how to measure and improve your Core Web Vitals scores.

How to measure or implement

  • Crawl your site with a tool, check Search Console for errors, review Core Web Vitals, audit content quality, and analyze your backlink profile

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Updated Mar 8, 2026·5 min read

What Is an SEO Site Audit?

An SEO site audit is a comprehensive analysis of everything that affects your website's search engine performance. It covers technical infrastructure (can search engines crawl and index your pages?), on-page optimization (are your pages well-structured for target queries?), content quality (is your content valuable and up to date?), and backlink profile (do authoritative sites link to you?).

Think of it as a health checkup for your website's search visibility.

Why You Need Regular SEO Audits

Sites that don't audit regularly accumulate problems:

  • Broken links multiply as content changes
  • Crawl errors block new pages from indexing
  • Content decay erodes rankings for previously strong pages
  • Technical debt from CMS updates, plugin changes, and migrations
  • Competitor movement changes what's needed to rank

Most SEO professionals recommend auditing quarterly, with monthly checks on critical metrics.

The SEO Audit Process

1. Technical Crawl

Use a crawler (Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, or Ahrefs Site Audit) to scan your entire site:

CheckWhat to Look For
HTTP status codes404s, redirect chains, 5xx errors
Canonical tagsMissing, self-referencing, or conflicting canonicals
robots.txtAccidentally blocked pages or sections
XML sitemapMissing pages, included noindex pages, stale URLs
Page speedSlow pages, large images, render-blocking resources
Mobile usabilityViewport issues, tap target spacing
Duplicate contentIdentical or near-identical pages competing
HreflangMissing return tags, incorrect language codes

2. Search Console Review

Check Google Search Console for:

  • Coverage issues — pages excluded from index and why
  • Core Web Vitals — LCP, FID/INP, CLS scores
  • Manual actions — any penalties or warnings
  • Enhancement reports — structured data errors
  • Crawl stats — crawl frequency and response time trends

3. On-Page Audit

Review page-level optimization:

  • Title tags — unique, under 60 chars, include target keyword
  • Meta descriptions — compelling, 120-155 chars, include CTA
  • Heading structure — logical H1 > H2 > H3 hierarchy
  • Internal linking — orphan pages, shallow link depth
  • Schema markup — appropriate types, valid implementation

4. Content Audit

Evaluate content quality and performance:

  • Thin content — pages under 300 words with no unique value
  • Outdated content — stale dates, deprecated tools, old statistics
  • Keyword cannibalization — multiple pages targeting the same query
  • Content gaps — queries with search demand but no matching page
  • Top performers — pages to protect and expand

Review your link profile:

  • Referring domains — quantity and quality trend
  • Toxic links — spammy or irrelevant inbound links
  • Lost links — recently dropped referring domains
  • Anchor text distribution — natural vs. over-optimized
  • Competitor gap — links competitors have that you don't

SEO Audit Tools

ToolBest ForPrice Range
Google Search ConsoleIndex coverage, performance dataFree
Screaming FrogTechnical crawlingFree (500 URLs) / $259/yr
AhrefsBacklinks + technical auditFrom $99/mo
SemrushAll-in-one audit + trackingFrom $139/mo
RankwiseAI search visibility auditSee pricing page

Common Audit Findings

The most frequent issues across sites:

  1. Missing or duplicate title tags (found on 60%+ of audited sites)
  2. Broken internal links (accumulate faster than most teams realize)
  3. Slow page speed (particularly from unoptimized images)
  4. Missing alt text (accessibility and image SEO impact)
  5. Orphan pages (pages with no internal links pointing to them)
  6. Redirect chains (2+ hops between URLs)
  7. Mixed content warnings (HTTP resources on HTTPS pages)

Free vs. Paid SEO Audits

Free audits (Google Search Console + Screaming Frog's free tier) cover the essentials for small sites. Paid tools add:

  • Larger crawl limits
  • Historical tracking
  • Competitive benchmarking
  • Automated monitoring
  • More detailed recommendations

For sites over 1,000 pages, paid tools pay for themselves quickly by catching issues before they impact traffic.

FAQs

How often should I run an SEO audit?

Full audits quarterly. Monitor critical metrics (crawl errors, Core Web Vitals, index coverage) monthly. Run targeted audits after any major site change.

How long does an SEO audit take?

A basic audit of a small site (under 500 pages) takes 2-4 hours. Enterprise sites with 100K+ pages can take 1-2 weeks for a thorough audit with prioritized recommendations.

What's the most important thing to check first?

Start with Google Search Console's index coverage report. If pages aren't indexed, nothing else matters — no ranking, no traffic.

Can I automate SEO audits?

Partially. Tools can crawl and flag technical issues automatically. But interpreting findings, prioritizing fixes, and evaluating content quality still requires human judgment.

  • Guide: /resources/guides/ai-search-content-audit
  • Template: /templates/checklist-template
  • Use case: /use-cases/marketing-agencies
  • Glossary:
    • /glossary/crawlability
    • /glossary/indexability
    • /glossary/core-web-vitals
    • /glossary/technical-seo

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