![]() ![]() Please also read our Screaming Frog SEO spider FAQs and full user guide for more information. Hopefully the above guide helps illustrate how to use the SEO Spider tool as a bulk redirect checker. This guide provides more detail on how to correctly configure the SEO Spider to follow links until the final destination and map these all out in a single report. We recommend thoroughly reading our ‘ How To Audit Redirects Using the SEO Spider‘ guide when uploading URLs in bulk. To switch to ‘list’ mode, simply click on ‘mode > list’ in the top level navigation and you’ll then be able to choose to paste in the URLs, manually enter them or upload via a file. This report maps out chains of redirects, the number of hops along the way and will identify the source, as well as if there is a loop.įinally, if you have a list of URLs you’d like to check redirects for instead of crawling a website, then you can upload them in list mode. To check internal redirect chains or identify redirect loops, simply export the ‘redirect chains’ report. ![]() 6) Click ‘Reports > Redirects > Redirect Chains’ To View Chains & Loops There’s a number of ways you can export data from the Screaming Frog SEO spider, so I recommend reading our user guide on exporting. If you’d rather view the data in a spreadsheet you can export both the ‘source’ URLs and ‘redirects’ by using the ‘Bulk Export’, ‘Response Codes’ and ‘Redirection (3XX) Inlinks’ option in the top level menu. 5) Use The ‘Bulk Export > Response Codes > Client Error (3XX) Inlinks’ Export You can also see the anchor text, alt text (if it’s an image which is hyperlinked) and whether the link is followed (true) or ‘nofollow’ (false). ‘From’ is the source where the redirect can be found, while ‘To’ is the URL which redirects. Here’s a closer view of the lower window pane which details the ‘inlinks’ data – To do this, simply click on a URL in the top window pane and then click on the ‘Inlinks’ tab at the bottom to populate the lower window pane.Īs you can see in this example, there is a redirect to our web scraping guide (), which is linked to from this page –. ![]() Obviously you’ll want to know the source of the redirecting links discovered (which URLs on the website link to the redirects), so they can be updated to the correct location. 4) View The Source Of Redirects By Clicking The ‘Inlinks’ Tab The ‘Redirect URI’ column shows the destination of the ‘address’ URL redirect.įor example, you can see the 301 permanently redirects to the URL in the above screenshot. In the instance above, there are 93 redirects which is 13% of the links discovered in the crawl. This crawl overview pane updates while crawling, so you can see there number of client error 3XX links you have at a glance. The ‘Redirect URI’ column shows the destination of the redirect of the URL in the ‘Address’ column. The status and status code are shown next to each URL and both ‘internal’ and ‘external’ URL redirects will be displayed. There are two ways to do this, you can simply click on the ‘tab’ at the top and use the drop down filter or you can use the right-hand window crawl overview pane and just click directly on ‘Redirection (3XX)’ tree view under the ‘Response Codes’ folder. You can wait until the crawl finishes and reaches 100%, or you can just view 3XX redirects while crawling by navigating to the ‘Response Codes’ tab and using the filter for ‘Redirection 3XX’. 2) Click The ‘Response Codes’ tab & ‘Redirection (3XX)’ Filter To View Redirects Open up the SEO Spider, type or copy in the website you wish to crawl in the ‘enter url to spider’ box and hit ‘Start’. Upload a List of URLs to Check Redirects.You have two options to check redirects, which you can skip to the relevant section by clicking on your preference below – The SEO Spider will show the status code (whether a 301, 302, 303 etc), the status (permanent or temporary), the destination of the redirect and it can follow multiple redirect chains to the final destination as well as identify loops. You can download via the buttons in the right hand side bar. To get started, you’ll need to download the SEO spider which is free in lite form, for up to 500 URLs. This tutorial walks you through how you can use the Screaming Frog SEO Spider for free (and paid) to check redirects (the HTTP 3XX response), either by crawling your website, or by uploading a list of URLs in bulk. How To Check Redirects Using The SEO Spider ![]()
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