Free Mobile-First Index Checker | OneStepToRank

Mobile-First Index Checker

Analyze your site's mobile-first readiness. Compare mobile vs desktop content, SEO signals, structured data, links, and images side by side.

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Mobile-First Parity Score
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Keep your mobile-first indexing in check. OneStepToRank tracks your Google rankings 24/7 and alerts you to visibility changes across your entire service area.

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What is Mobile-First Indexing?

Mobile-first indexing means Google uses the mobile version of your website as the primary source for indexing and ranking. Since July 2024, Google has completed the transition to mobile-first indexing for all websites globally. This means Google's crawler (Googlebot smartphone) visits your mobile version first and uses that content to determine your rankings, even for desktop search results.

If your mobile version has less content, fewer links, or missing metadata compared to your desktop version, Google only sees the reduced mobile version. This can directly impact your search visibility and organic traffic, regardless of how comprehensive your desktop site may be.

Why Mobile-Desktop Parity Matters

Content parity between mobile and desktop is the foundation of mobile-first indexing readiness. Google explicitly recommends that both versions serve equivalent content. This includes visible text, headings, images with alt attributes, structured data markup, meta tags, and internal links. When there is a gap between what mobile and desktop users see, Google indexes only the mobile version, potentially missing critical content that supports your rankings.

Common parity problems include:

  • Hidden content behind accordions, tabs, or "read more" buttons that Google cannot expand on mobile.
  • Fewer internal links in mobile hamburger menus compared to desktop navigation bars.
  • Missing structured data that exists on desktop but was not added to the mobile template.
  • Truncated meta descriptions or different title tags served to mobile users.
  • Images without alt text on mobile, even though desktop images have descriptive alt attributes.

How This Tool Works

The Mobile-First Index Checker fetches your page using both a desktop and mobile user-agent, then compares the two versions across five categories: Content (word count, headings, paragraphs), SEO Signals (title, meta description, canonical, robots, hreflang), Structured Data (schema types and counts), Links (internal and external), and Images (total count and alt text coverage). Each difference is flagged with a severity level so you can prioritize fixes.

Use this tool alongside our SERP Previewer to optimize how your mobile pages appear in search results, and our Local Rank Checker to track how mobile-first improvements affect your actual rankings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is mobile-first indexing?

Mobile-first indexing means Google primarily uses the mobile version of your website for indexing and ranking. Since July 2024, all websites are evaluated this way. If your mobile version has less content or missing signals compared to desktop, your search visibility may suffer because Google only sees the mobile version.

How do I know if my site is ready for mobile-first indexing?

Your site is ready when both mobile and desktop versions deliver equivalent content, metadata, structured data, internal links, and images with alt text. Use this checker to compare both versions side by side and identify any content gaps or missing SEO signals on mobile.

What are the most common mobile-first indexing issues?

The most frequent problems are hidden content behind interactive elements, missing or different meta tags on mobile, fewer internal links in mobile navigation, structured data only present on desktop, and images without alt text on the mobile version. Lazy-loaded content that requires user interaction is also commonly problematic.

Does responsive design automatically pass mobile-first indexing?

Responsive design provides a strong baseline since both versions share the same HTML, but it does not guarantee parity. CSS display:none rules can hide content on mobile, JavaScript may load differently, and navigation menus often expose fewer links on smaller screens. Always verify both versions deliver the same substantive content.