Canonical Issues
Canonical tags declare which URL is the authoritative version of a page when duplicates or near-duplicates exist. Missing, self-contradictory, or misdirected canonical tags cause search engines to index the wrong URL, split link equity across duplicate versions, or trigger unexpected deindexation during algorithm updates.
Why it matters: Canonical misconfiguration is one of the leading causes of ranking fluctuations after site migrations and one of the hardest issues to diagnose without a systematic audit.
Detected on this site: 26 of 26 2xx pages (100.0%) have canonical issues: 26 missing, 0 wrong domain.
Sites Most Affected by This Issue
These sites show the highest measured impact for Canonical Issues in our audited dataset.
View full leaderboardCommonly Affected Pages
- HTTPS and HTTP variants of the same page lacking consistent canonical declarations
- www vs. non-www variants not canonicalized to a single preferred version
- Product pages accessible via multiple URL paths (/category/product vs. /product)
- Paginated series without canonical tags pointing back to page 1 or a view-all page
- AMP pages missing the canonical reference back to their standard HTML counterpart
How to Fix
- 1.Ensure every published page has a self-referencing canonical tag on its single preferred URL.
- 2.Audit all canonical tags pointing to external domains or different paths — these are rarely intentional.
- 3.For duplicate products accessible via multiple URLs, canonicalize to the version with the highest inbound links.
- 4.Verify your XML sitemap only includes canonical URLs, not their parameter or pagination variants.
- 5.Use Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool to confirm which URL Google is treating as the canonical.