What can be the problem? Thanks - Nikos A., Limassol, Cyprus Try the most obvious thing first. Make sure you're not blocking Google with a robots.txt file or robots "noindex" meta tag. If you have Google Search Console, the easiest way to do this is to use the Fetch and Render tool. If you don't have GSC, get it, it's free - but try a publicly available tool like this by rexswain. If all is well, move on to these items: View your website in a text browser like Lynx or perform Fetch and Render in Google Search Console. Is there something in there? Keep in mind that some technologies (like Flash) are not indexable. If your website has no HTML content, it is unlikely to be indexed. Check that you are not indexed at all. Do a search in Google for where you replace with your domain.
Always nothing? Sometimes people fax list think that just because they're not getting any search traffic, they're not getting indexed. It's not always the case. Make sure you search for your country domain. I noticed in your original question that your email address is a .gr (Greece). Be sure to search above on Google.gr. It's not that you can't appear on but that you are likely to appear on Google.gr first. Finally, check your log files (you can ask your host for a few days or a few weeks depending on your traffic level). Does Googlebot visit your site? If you don't see it coming at all, try doing a manual submission. Advertising Continue reading below If you see Googlebot visiting the site but you're still not indexed, that's a bad sign. Look at the Wayback machine to see if your domain may have been used for spamming before buying it.
It's possible (although unlikely) that your domain is in fact blacklisted. If so, post on the webmaster forum and ask for help first. If you've built decent backlinks, have social traffic, provide something other than what everyone can find anywhere else (that last one is important), and have more than one site page, it's very unlikely that you are not. indexed unless there is something more serious wrong. Nine times out of ten there is a . I help run a travel website and we have pages with similar travel options in most of their itineraries which means their main content is the same with a few variations. What would be better? Keep similar pages noindex to ensure they're not considered duplicate content, or leave them canonical to the 'original'/bestseller option?