In this article
Google Search Console is completely free, connects directly to Google’s own data about your site, and is the starting point for almost every SEO diagnosis worth making. This guide covers what it is, how to set it up, what each report tells you, and how to turn that data into measurable improvements, including what changed in 2026 with AI Overviews tracking and natural language filters.
Contents
What is Google Search Console?
GSC vs GA4: What’s the difference?
How to set up Google Search Console
The Performance Report: your most-used tool
URL Inspection: what Google actually sees
Page Indexing: what Google has (and hasn’t) indexed
Core Web Vitals and Page Experience
Links, Structured Data, and Manual Actions
Three practical GSC workflows for growth
How GSC connects to AI Overviews in 2026
Picture this: a Marketing Manager’s organic traffic has been flat for three months. The rankings look broadly intact, the agency report shows impressions climbing, yet qualified leads are not moving. She has no way of knowing whether Google is finding all her pages, which queries she’s actually showing up for, or why her best product page stopped getting clicks six weeks ago.
That’s the exact situation Google Search Console was built to resolve. It doesn’t guess at your SEO health from third-party data. It shows you what Google itself is seeing: which queries trigger your pages, which pages are indexed or excluded, which technical issues are suppressing rankings, and as of 2026, whether your content is appearing in AI Overviews.
At Shout Digital, Google Search Console data is the first thing we open in any SEO engagement. Every opportunity analysis, every penalty investigation, and every technical audit starts here. This guide explains why.
What is Google Search Console?
Google Search Console (GSC) is a free tool provided by Google that lets website owners, marketers, and SEO specialists monitor how their site performs in Google Search. It is completely free to use and provides data sourced directly from Google’s crawl, index, and ranking systems: not estimates, not averages from third-party databases.
Connected to your site, GSC reports on four core areas:
Which queries show your pages, how many clicks and impressions they generate, your average position, and click-through rate.
Which pages Google has indexed, which it excluded and why, crawl errors, and whether Googlebot can access your content correctly.
Core Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, INP), mobile usability, and HTTPS status: the technical signals that directly affect your ranking eligibility.
Schema markup validation, rich result eligibility, external links pointing to your site, and any manual actions (penalties) Google has applied.
GSC stores up to 16 months of data in its interface. For longer historical records, you can export via the Search Console API or connect to Google Looker Studio. Data typically has a 2-3 day delay, so you’re seeing near-real-time but not today’s numbers.
GSC vs GA4: what’s the difference?
Google Search Console and Google Analytics 4 (GA4) are complementary tools that answer entirely different questions. Confusing them is one of the most common mistakes we see in marketing teams reviewing their own SEO data.
| Google Search Console | Google Analytics 4 | |
|---|---|---|
| Core question | How does Google find and rank my site? | What do visitors do once they arrive? |
| Data source | Google’s own crawl and index systems | JavaScript tracking tag on your site |
| Key metrics | Impressions, clicks, CTR, average position, indexing status | Sessions, engagement, conversions, revenue, user journeys |
| Best for | SEO diagnosis, keyword analysis, technical crawl issues | Conversion analysis, user behaviour, attribution |
| Together | Connect them to map the full journey: from Google query to landing page to conversion | |
The practical implication: if organic traffic is flat in GA4, go to GSC first. If GSC shows impressions are growing but clicks aren’t, you have a CTR problem on the Google side. If GSC shows your impressions are also flat or declining, you have a crawling, indexing, or ranking problem. These require completely different fixes.
How to set up Google Search Console
Setting up Google Search Console takes under 10 minutes and costs nothing: you need a Google account and either DNS access or your website’s HTML to verify ownership. Visit search.google.com/search-console, click “Add property,” and GSC begins collecting data within 24 to 72 hours of verification.
You’ll choose between two property types:
Covers your entire domain including all subdomains (www, blog, shop), all protocols (HTTP and HTTPS), and all paths. You verify via a DNS TXT record added through your domain registrar (e.g. GoDaddy, Namecheap, Cloudflare). This gives you the most complete picture and is the right choice for almost every site.
Covers only pages under the specific URL you enter (e.g. https://www.example.com.au/). Easier to verify via HTML tag, Google Analytics, or Google Tag Manager, but limited to that exact URL pattern. Useful for monitoring a specific subdirectory or when you don’t have DNS access.
The Domain property is the right choice for almost every site: it captures all subdomains, protocols, and paths in a single view, verified via a DNS TXT record through your domain registrar. After verifying, submit your XML sitemap under Sitemaps in the left navigation. Your sitemap URL is typically yourdomain.com.au/sitemap.xml. Full Performance report data builds up over a few weeks, but crawl and indexing signals start appearing almost immediately.
The Performance Report: your most-used tool
The Performance Report is where you’ll spend most of your time in GSC. It shows how your site performs across Google Search, Google Discover, and Google News, and as of 2026 it includes data from AI Overviews results. Access it from the left navigation under Search results.
The four core metrics
Clicks
Number of times users clicked through to your site from a Google result
Impressions
How often a page appeared in Google results (whether or not it was clicked)
CTR
Click-through rate: clicks divided by impressions. Average organic CTR varies by position; position 1 typically generates 25–30% CTR
Position
Average ranking position for a given query across all searches during the selected period
Dimensions: how to slice the data
Toggle between four tabs beneath the metrics: Queries (which search terms trigger your pages), Pages (which URLs earn clicks), Countries (where your traffic originates), and Devices (desktop, mobile, tablet). Layer multiple dimensions together to answer specific questions, for example, filter to mobile devices and then look at queries to find terms where mobile position is significantly worse than desktop.
A 2026 update worth knowing: Google added natural language filters to the Performance report in December 2025, now available globally. Instead of manually selecting filter combinations, you can type a plain-English request directly into the report. For example: “show me mobile queries with high impressions but low CTR in the last 28 days.” GSC configures the filters automatically. It’s a genuine time-saver for teams who run this analysis regularly.
“Growing impressions with flat clicks is almost always a CTR or AI Overviews problem. These require completely different responses.”
The first diagnostic check in every Shout Digital SEO audit: compare impressions vs. clicks over a 12-month period.
URL Inspection: what Google actually sees
The URL Inspection tool lets you check any individual page on your site to see how Googlebot views it. Paste a URL into the search bar at the top of GSC, or click “URL inspection” in the left navigation. The tool reports whether the page is indexed, when it was last crawled, which canonical URL Google is using, and whether any structured data was found and validated.
The most powerful feature here: Test Live URL. This fetches the page as Googlebot would see it right now, rather than showing the cached version. Use this after making content changes to confirm Google can see the updated version before you request re-indexing.
When to use URL Inspection:
- A new or updated page isn’t appearing in search after several days
- You want to confirm a canonical redirect is working correctly
- You’ve added schema markup and want to see whether Google detected it
- A page is ranking with the wrong URL (canonical confusion)
- After fixing a technical issue, use the Request Indexing button to prompt Google to recrawl
Note: Request Indexing doesn’t guarantee immediate re-crawling, and Google recommends using it selectively rather than for every page update. For site-wide freshness, updating your sitemap’s lastmod dates is more effective.
Page Indexing: what Google has (and hasn’t) indexed
The Page Indexing report (found under Indexing in the left navigation) shows a full breakdown of every URL Google has discovered on your site. Pages fall into two buckets: indexed and not indexed. The not-indexed bucket is where SEO problems hide.
Google will exclude pages for legitimate reasons: duplicate content, noindex tags, or thin pages correctly blocked via robots.txt. But it will also exclude pages it couldn’t crawl due to server errors, or pages it found “not useful” due to quality signals. The report groups exclusions by reason, so you can identify patterns rather than chasing individual URLs.
The exclusion reasons to act on immediately:
For a deeper technical breakdown of how crawl issues affect SEO, see our guide on technical SEO workflow, covering crawlability, indexability, and how to structure an audit.
Core Web Vitals and Page Experience
Google Search Console’s Core Web Vitals and Page Experience reports show the technical signals Google uses as confirmed ranking factors, grouped by URL so you can see exactly which pages are failing and by how much. A site with 40% of its pages in the “Poor” CWV bucket is competing against technically cleaner sites with a structural disadvantage. No amount of extra content spend will close that gap.
Three reports matter here:
Measures Largest Contentful Paint (LCP, page load speed: should be under 2.5 seconds), Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS, visual stability: should be under 0.1), and Interaction to Next Paint (INP, responsiveness: should be under 200ms). GSC groups your URLs into Good, Needs Improvement, and Poor and tells you which specific pages are failing and why.
Flags pages that fail Google’s mobile-friendliness standards: text too small to read, tap targets too close together, content wider than the screen. With Google’s mobile-first index, a page that fails mobile usability is ranked based on its mobile version regardless of how good the desktop version is.
Confirms whether your site serves pages over HTTPS. HTTP pages are marked “not secure” in Chrome and treated as a minor ranking signal. For Australian ecommerce brands especially, any HTTP pages represent both a ranking and trust issue.
If your Core Web Vitals show significant “Poor” URLs, address those before putting more budget into content or links. You are competing with one hand tied behind your back if the technical foundation is failing.
Links, Structured Data, and Manual Actions
Google Search Console’s Links, Enhancements, and Security sections cover three distinct signals: who links to your site and how your pages connect internally, whether your schema markup is valid and generating rich results, and whether Google has applied any manual penalties. Each report reveals a different type of quality signal that affects how Google ranks and presents your pages.
Links
The Links report (under the main left navigation) shows two types: external links (other websites linking to your pages) and internal links (how your own pages connect to each other). For external links, you can see your top-linked pages, the sites linking most often, and the anchor text they use. This is useful for identifying your most authoritative pages and spotting unusual link patterns before they cause problems.
Internal links reveal where your link equity is concentrated. Pages with very few internal links pointing to them are harder for Google to find and rank, regardless of how good the content is.
Structured Data (Enhancements)
Under Search Appearance in the left navigation, GSC shows every structured data type it detected on your site, whether that data is valid or has errors, and which specific pages are affected. Schema markup that contains errors will not generate rich results in Google Search, even if it’s present on the page.
In January 2026, Google removed support for some lower-value structured data types (including practice problem markup) from Search Console and its API. The core schema types that drive rich results (Article, Product, FAQ, Review, HowTo, BreadcrumbList, LocalBusiness, and Event) remain fully supported. Focus your structured data investment on these high-value types rather than accumulating schema for its own sake.
Manual Actions
Under Security and Manual Actions, GSC tells you whether Google has applied a manual penalty to your site, meaning a human reviewer at Google identified a violation of their quality guidelines. Manual actions suppress rankings either for specific pages or site-wide. If you see anything here, it requires immediate action: identify the cause, fix it, and submit a reconsideration request.
At Shout Digital, across 15 years and hundreds of client accounts, no client has ever received a Google penalty, algorithmic or manual. That’s a direct result of building SEO strategies around long-term quality rather than shortcuts. If you’re evaluating a new agency, ask them directly: have any of your clients received manual actions in the past 12 months?
Three practical GSC workflows for growth
Google Search Console gives you the data; the question is which workflow turns that data into action each week. At Shout Digital, three workflows run on every client account to surface fast wins and catch problems early. Each starts in a different GSC report and produces a specific, actionable output.
Workflow 1: Find your striking-distance keywords
Pages ranking between positions 5 and 20 are your highest-leverage SEO targets. They’re already generating impressions (Google has decided they’re relevant) but they’re not in the top positions where clicks concentrate. Small improvements in content depth, internal linking, or page structure can move them into the top three results.
In the Performance Report: filter by Search Type (Web), open the Queries tab, then click Average position to sort by position. Filter to show positions greater than 4 and less than 21. Cross-reference with impressions to find high-volume queries in striking distance. Those are your priority optimisation targets this month.
Workflow 2: Fix high-impression, low-CTR pages
When a page generates strong impressions but low clicks relative to its position, the title tag and meta description aren’t compelling searchers to choose your result. Switch to the Pages tab in Performance, sort by impressions, and then check the CTR column. Any page with thousands of impressions but a CTR below 2% at position 3 or better is underperforming.
Click into that page and switch to the Queries view to see which specific search terms it’s showing for. That tells you what searchers are looking for. Rewrite the title tag and meta description to directly match that intent: specific, benefit-led, with the primary keyword prominent. Retest after three weeks.
Workflow 3: Diagnose a traffic drop
When organic traffic drops and nobody knows why, GSC is the starting point. Compare the last 28 days against the previous 28 days in the Performance Report (use the date comparison feature). Switch to the Pages tab and sort by click change to find the specific pages that dropped. Then check those pages in URL Inspection to see if they were re-crawled and whether indexing status changed.
Also check the Page Indexing report for any new exclusion errors that appeared in the same timeframe. A sudden increase in “Crawled – currently not indexed” pages often coincides with a content quality update. And check Manual Actions to rule out a penalty.
This workflow also connects to the broader diagnostic framework covered in our guide to why digital marketing underperforms; GSC is step one of that self-audit process.
How GSC connects to AI Overviews in 2026
Google Search Console now tracks how your pages perform in AI Overviews, the AI-generated summaries that appear at the top of many Google results pages. Traffic from AI Overviews is included in the web Performance report, and you can filter by search type to see specifically which pages and queries are generating impressions or clicks through AI-generated results.
This matters because the relationship between rankings and clicks changed in 2026. A page can rank at position 1 for a query while generating fewer clicks than it used to, because an AI Overview is answering the question above the organic results. If you’re seeing growing impressions but flat or declining clicks on informational queries, AI Overviews displacement is a likely contributor.
What GSC shows you about AI Overviews
| Metric | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Impressions (AI Overviews) | Your page was included in a Google AI Overview displayed to a searcher |
| Clicks (AI Overviews) | A searcher clicked your link within an AI Overview, rather than clicking an organic result |
| High impressions / no AI clicks | Your content appears in AI Overviews but users are satisfied with the summary. Consider whether the query deserves deeper, more actionable content |
| Queries missing from AI Overviews | Content optimisation opportunity. See our guide on Answer Engine Optimisation |
Beyond Google’s AI Overviews, optimising for AI-powered search tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Claude requires a strategy that extends well beyond what GSC tracks. At Shout Digital, our SEO service now integrates AI Overviews optimisation alongside traditional organic search, because the two are increasingly the same game. For a broader look at how AI search is changing visibility, see our guide on Generative Engine Optimisation.
Frequently asked questions
Updated May 2026. For ongoing guidance on SEO strategy, technical audits, and AI search visibility across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, see Shout Digital’s SEO services.
We are digital marketing experts