 Hi, I'm Daniel Weisberg, Search Advocate at Google. And in this video, I'll talk about Search Console's URL inspection tool, which provides information about Google's indexed and live versions of a specific page on your site. This is one of the most important debugging tools to help you understand why your page might not be appearing the way you expect in search results. By the end of this video, you should be able to find out the current index status of your pages, test a live URL, ask Google to crawl a specific page, and view detailed information about the pages loaded resources and other information. You can access this tool from the top bar, from the navigation sidebar, or anywhere you see a little magnifying glass next to a URL in a table. Paste the full URL you want to check into the Inspect Search box in Search Console and press Enter. To use the URL inspection tool, the URL you're inspecting must be in the current property. Note that this tool can only be used for web pages and will only show results for web search. Once the page displays the results, you will see three different sections, all of them presenting information from Google's last crawl or crawl attempt, not from a live test of the page. In the presence on Google Card, you'll get a verdict on whether or not the URL can appear in Google Search results. For example, your URL can return a response that the URL is on Google, which means you're good. Or you might learn that the URL is on Google, but has issues, which means the URL has been indexed and can appear in Google Search results. But there might be issues with structured data in the page. In the covered section, you'll learn where the page was discovered, such as a site map or a referring page, when was the last crawl and by which user agent, and whether the page is included in the Google Web Index or maybe another version of it was chosen as the canonical for the Google Index. For example, here you might discover that a specific page is currently submitted in your site map but marked as no index or that there is a server error on your side and Google couldn't reach a number of pages. In the enhancement section, you'll find any structured data details, along with AMP and mobile usability warnings and errors. For example, if your page is not marked up properly with structured data, the inspection will return an error detailing the missing or wrong values. You can learn more about each of the sections in the Search Console Help Center. Once you get the current page status, you'll have three main actions to perform. First, you can click Test Live URL to see if the page can be indexed by Google. This runs a test against the live page for information similar to the indexed URL. This is very useful to test live if an issue still exists even after you've fixed it in your site. If you want to see a live rendered version of your page by Google, this is the only place you'll find it. This test confirms whether Google Bot can access your page for indexing. However, even if a live test is positive, your page must still fulfill other conditions in order to be indexed, such as following the Webmaster guidelines. Second, you can click Request Indexing for Google to re-index your page if you make changes to it. For example, if you fix the structured data error and enhance your mobile usability or perform the major change in the page, you might want to request the indexing. And third, you can view more information about the tested page by clicking View Crawled Page. This will show the retrieved HTML and more info about the HTTP response and page resources loaded. Wow, that really is interesting. I hope now you understand how to inspect a URL to get information about Google's indexed version of a specific page on your site. That might come really handy when analyzing your search efforts on Google. In the next episode, I'll talk about how to monitor your search appearance, where to find errors in your structured data, and how to ask Google to validate fixes you've done to your site. Don't forget to subscribe to the Google Webmaster's YouTube channel, where we'll be publishing lots of Search Console videos. So stay tuned.