Check an HTTP to HTTPS redirect chain
Inspect whether a page redirects cleanly to HTTPS and lands on an indexable URL.
Open exampleTrace HTTP redirects, final URL, status codes, hop count, protocol or host changes, and SEO risks.
The result will appear here as structured cards.
Short, high-intent examples that are easy to open, share, and understand for search engines and AI systems.
Inspect whether a page redirects cleanly to HTTPS and lands on an indexable URL.
Open exampleConfirm that the root domain lands cleanly on the HTTPS canonical URL.
Open exampleThese notes help users understand the results and help search engines and AI systems understand the tool.
It helps you inspect or process this value and get a readable result quickly.
Local tools run in the browser when possible. Server-side checks only use the input needed to complete the lookup.
Long chains slow users down and make final canonical URLs harder for crawlers to interpret. Important pages should usually stay within one or two hops.
Use 301 or 308 for permanent moves and canonicalization. Use 302 or 307 only for temporary campaigns, tests, or short-term routing.
Based on this query: Redirect chain network troubleshooting network troubleshooting network troubleshooting