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Blogger “Crawled – Currently Not Indexed” Status: Real Reasons and Safe Fixes for Beginners (2026)


Google Search Console indexing status for Blogger beginners


Introduction 

When beginners check Google Search Console for the first time, two confusing statuses often appear:

  • Discovered – currently not indexed

  • Crawled – currently not indexed

At first glance, both look similar. Many bloggers think Google has rejected their site or penalized their content. This is not true.

These two statuses mean very different things, and misunderstanding them causes unnecessary panic.

This article explains the exact difference, why these statuses appear on Blogger websites, and what beginners should realistically do.


What Google Indexing Actually Means

Before understanding these messages, you must understand one thing clearly:

why new blogger websites take time to appear on Google


Indexing is not automatic.

Publishing a post does not guarantee that Google will index it immediately. Google follows three steps:

  1. Discovery – Google finds the URL

  2. Crawling – Google visits the page

  3. Indexing – Google decides whether to store it in search results

The two statuses you see belong to step 1 and step 2.


What “Discovered – Currently Not Indexed” Really Means

This status means:

  • Google knows your page exists

  • The URL was found through sitemap or internal links

  • Google has not visited the page yet

Important point:
👉 No crawling has happened

Why This Happens on Blogger Sites

Common reasons include:

  • The blog is new

  • Very low site authority

  • Too many new URLs published at once

  • Weak internal linking

  • Google is prioritizing other sites

This is normal for new Blogger websites.


What “Crawled – Currently Not Indexed” Really Means

This status means:

  • Google visited your page

  • Google read the content

  • Google decided not to index it yet

Important point:
👉 This is a quality evaluation stage, not a penalty.

Google often delays indexing when it is unsure about the value of the page.


Key Difference Between the Two (Beginner-Friendly)

StatusMeaning
Discovered – not indexedGoogle knows the URL but hasn’t visited
Crawled – not indexedGoogle visited but postponed indexing

Neither status means your site is banned or broken.


Why Blogger Websites See These Messages More Often

Blogger sites commonly face this because:

  • Blogger blogs are often new

  • Many beginners publish similar topics

  • Google is careful with free platforms

  • Trust builds slowly

This does not mean Blogger is bad for SEO. It simply means patience is required.


Should Beginners Be Worried?

No.

These statuses are temporary for most blogs.

Google does not index everything immediately, especially on new domains. Many indexed pages start with one of these messages.


Common Beginner Mistakes That Make It Worse

Avoid doing these:

  • Repeatedly requesting indexing

  • Deleting and republishing posts

  • Changing URLs after publishing

  • Using third-party indexing tools

  • Publishing many thin posts quickly

These actions slow down trust instead of speeding it up.


What Actually Helps Indexing Over Time

Focus on actions that signal quality:

  • Publish detailed, original content

  • Keep one clear niche

  • Add internal links naturally

  • Let Google crawl at its own pace

  • Be consistent, not aggressive

Google rewards stability, not pressure.


How Long Does It Usually Take?

Typical timelines for new Blogger blogs:

  • Discovered → Crawled: a few days to weeks

  • Crawled → Indexed: a few days to several weeks

This varies depending on content quality and site growth.


Final Reality Check for Beginners

“Discovered – currently not indexed” and
“Crawled – currently not indexed”

are status messages, not rejections.

They mean Google is still evaluating your site.

If your content is useful and consistent, indexing will happen naturally.

Do not panic. Do not chase shortcuts.
Let your site earn trust step by step.


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