WordPress SEO Checker
See what search engines see on your WordPress site. Check crawlability, indexing, metadata, schema, headings, and links, with fixes tailored to WordPress.
This is one slice of the full scan
See your complete website report
This checker covers one part of your site. A full Stackra scan grades the whole thing and shows you the screenshots, expert reviews, and action plan a single check cannot.
Your Growth Readiness Score
One 0 to 100 score across conversion, search, and technical health, with the weak spots ranked.
Expert AI reviews and visuals
A CMO, SEO expert, and CTO read your site, with screenshots and evidence this quick check leaves out.
A prioritized action plan
The fixes that move the needle first, in plain language, tagged by impact and effort.
Free to sign up. Results in about 5 minutes.

How the WordPress SEO Checker works
Enter your URL and Stackra reuses a recent scan of your site, or runs a fresh one, then reads the technical signals search engines care about: whether the page can be crawled and indexed, your canonical and social tags, your heading structure, your schema markup, and your link health. Every fix is framed for WordPress, so you only see advice you can actually act on.
Does this WordPress SEO checker work for any WordPress site?
Yes. It works for self-hosted WordPress.org sites and most WordPress.com sites. Enter your homepage URL and Stackra reads the same technical signals search engines use, then explains each result in plain English with WordPress-specific fixes.
Which WordPress SEO plugin should I use?
Yoast SEO and Rank Math are the two most popular. Either one handles your titles, meta descriptions, canonical tags, XML sitemap, and schema markup. You only need one. This checker tells you which of those signals are missing so you know what to configure.
How do I add schema markup in WordPress?
Use an SEO plugin like Yoast or Rank Math, which output Organization, WebSite, and Article schema automatically. For LocalBusiness or Service schema, use the plugin settings or a dedicated schema plugin. Avoid SoftwareApplication schema, which triggers an install result visitors cannot complete.
Why is my WordPress page not being indexed?
The most common causes are the Search Engine Visibility setting under Settings > Reading being switched off, a noindex tag added by an SEO plugin, or a robots.txt rule blocking the page. This checker flags each of these so you can find the cause quickly.
Is more than one H1 a problem on WordPress?
No. Many WordPress themes output more than one H1 and search engines handle this without issue. This checker only flags a page when it has zero H1, because that leaves the main topic of the page unstated.