Google Cache Checker
Check if Google has a cached version of any web page and see exactly when it was last crawled and cached.
What is Google Cache Checker?
Google Cache is a snapshot of a web page saved by Google's crawlers the last time they visited. Our Google Cache Checker instantly tells you whether Google has a cached version of any URL and when it was last updated — a key indicator of how recently Google crawled your page.
Why Check Google Cache Status?
- Verify Google crawled your page — A cache entry confirms Googlebot visited
- Check last crawl date — Freshness matters for ranking currency
- Diagnose indexing problems — No cache often means crawl issues
- Monitor competitors — See how frequently Google crawls rival pages
What to Do If Your Page Is Not Cached
If no cache exists, Google may not have crawled your page recently. Use our URL Indexer to request a crawl, or Ping your Sitemap to notify Google of updates.
Frequently Asked Questions
Google Cache is a snapshot of a web page saved by Google's crawlers the last time they visited it. Google stores this copy in its servers so users can view the page even if the original is temporarily unavailable.
You can find cached pages by clicking the three-dot menu next to a search result and selecting "Cached", or by searching for "cache:yoururl.com" in Google. Our tool automates this check for any URL.
Your page may not be cached if: Google hasn't crawled it recently, a Cache-Control: no-store header is set, the page has a noarchive meta robots tag, or the page was recently published.
No. Google Cache is updated each time Googlebot crawls the page. Crawl frequency depends on your site's authority, update frequency, and sitemap configuration. Popular pages may be cached daily while others take weeks.
Use Google Search Console to request a recrawl of the URL. You can also use our Bulk URL Indexer or Sitemap Ping Tool to signal Google to re-crawl your pages sooner.