About this tool
Audit pagination markup before release so rel next and prev links, canonicals, and robots directives stay consistent across paginated category and archive pages.
The Pagination Tag Checker validates rel=next and rel=prev markup across paginated URL series such as category listings, blog archives, and search results. It detects broken chains, non-reciprocal references, and conflicting canonical directives that can fragment crawl signals.
- Parses URL rows in URL|next|prev|canonical|robots format with optional relative URL resolution.
- Flags broken rel=next and rel=prev relationships, missing reciprocal links, and sequence mismatches.
- Checks canonical self-reference and highlights noindex directives on paginated rows.
How to use Pagination Checker
Enter or upload the URLs in a paginated series along with their link-element values. The checker verifies that each page points correctly to its neighbors, confirms self-referencing canonicals, and reports any gaps or contradictions in the chain.
When this tool is useful
- QA category, archive, or listing templates that emit rel next and prev tags across multiple pages.
- Review crawler exports for paginated URL series before large IA or CMS releases.
- Catch canonical drift or noindex directives on paginated pages before indexing signals split.
Practical tips
- Keep each paginated URL self-canonical unless you have a deliberate consolidation strategy.
- Ensure rel=next and rel=prev are reciprocal so crawlers can move both directions across the series.
- Re-run the audit after template changes because one partial can break pagination signals sitewide.
Why people use this tool
Although Google announced it no longer uses rel=next/prev as an indexing signal, other search engines still rely on it, and correct pagination markup helps crawlers traverse deep content efficiently. Broken chains can cause crawlers to miss pages entirely or waste budget re-crawling fragments.
Related search intents
pagination tag checker, rel next prev checker, pagination seo audit, paged series checker.