Total Redirects
0
Redirect Types
Status
A 301 (permanent redirect) passes ~95% of link equity to the destination URL. A 302 (temporary redirect) signals that the original URL may return, so search engines may not transfer ranking signals. Always use 301s for permanent URL changes.
Each redirect hop adds latency and dilutes link equity. Google follows up to 10 redirects but recommends keeping chains as short as possible. The ideal scenario is a single redirect from the old URL directly to the final destination.
Redirect chains, loops, and mixed redirect types can hurt your SEO. Our on-page optimization experts clean up redirects and preserve your link equity.
Explore On-Page Optimization →All images on this website are for representation purposes only and may not reflect actual deliverables.