How to fix search results indexable on WooCommerce

Add a noindex robots meta tag to all internal search results pages and block the search path in robots.txt to prevent thin, duplicate, near-infinite pages from polluting Google's index.

Steps for WooCommerce

  1. Install the free Yoast SEO or Rank Math plugin if not already installed.
  2. In Yoast SEO: go to SEO → Search Appearance → Archives → Search Pages and toggle 'Show search pages in search results?' to OFF (sets noindex automatically).
  3. In Rank Math: go to Rank Math → Titles & Meta → Search Results and enable 'No Index'.
  4. For robots.txt: go to SEO → Tools → File Editor (Yoast) or Rank Math → General Settings → Edit robots.txt, and add: Disallow: /?s= (WordPress default search uses ?s= query parameter).
  5. Verify by visiting /?s=test on your store and checking the page source for the noindex meta tag.
Official WooCommerce documentation ↗
<meta name="robots" content="noindex,follow">

# robots.txt addition (adjust path to match your platform)
User-agent: *
Disallow: /search
Disallow: /search/

What is search results indexable?

When a visitor types something into your store's search box, the results appear on a URL like /search?q=red+shoes. These pages are generated on the fly — there are potentially millions of them (one for every possible search term). They contain no unique content of their own; they just pull together product listings that already exist elsewhere on your site. "Search results indexable" means Google can currently crawl and index these pages, which it should not be doing.

Letting Google index your internal search results wastes your crawl budget — Googlebot spends time on throwaway pages instead of your real product and category pages, which can slow down how quickly new products get discovered and ranked. These pages are considered "thin content" and can dilute the overall quality signal of your site, potentially dragging down rankings across your entire domain. They also create a near-infinite duplicate URL space (every search query is a new URL) that can trigger duplicate-content issues. Blocking them is a well-established best practice recommended by Google itself and costs you nothing in organic traffic — nobody finds your site via a search results page.

See the complete Search results indexable guide for every platform and the full background.

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