---
url: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/search-console-indexed-pages-decreased/'
language: 'fr'
title: 'Search Console Indexed Pages Decreased After a Freeze? Recount vs Real Deindexing'
author:
  name: 'Abdullah Nouman'
  url: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/author/nouman/'
date: '2026-07-05T18:27:00+00:00'
modified: '2026-07-05T19:09:10+00:00'
type: 'post'
categories:
  - 'Search Console Tips &amp; Tutorials'
image: 'https://www.wpconsults.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/search-console-indexed-pages-decreased-hero-7622.avif'
published: true
---

# Search Console Indexed Pages Decreased After a Freeze? Recount vs Real Deindexing

The Search Console page indexing report froze on June 11, 2026, sat still for almost three weeks, then came back with a step down that made plenty of sites look like they had lost pages overnight. Most of those cliffs were bookkeeping catching up, not deindexing.

 

In this piece I will walk you through why a frozen report ends in a cliff, and the four checks I run to confirm whether pages actually left Google’s index before touching anything.

  

## Principaux enseignements

 

- The page indexing report is a **delayed snapshot** of Google’s bookkeeping, not a live feed of the index; the two can drift weeks apart.
- When the report freezes, indexing keeps moving in the background, so the catch-up lands as one step on the graph instead of a gradual slope.
- A recount cliff leaves the Performance report stable; real deindexing pulls **impressions** down with it.
- URL Inspection and your server logs are the ground truth for individual pages, not the trend line.
- The worst response to a stale report is bulk resubmitting sitemaps and re-requesting indexing; check the report’s own last-updated date first, then judge.

  Table des matières

- What happened to the page indexing report in June 2026
- Why a frozen indexing report ends in a cliff, not a slope
- How to check whether pages actually left Google's index
- What not to do while the indexing report is stale
- So, did Google deindex your pages or just recount them?
- Journal des mises à jour

 

## What happened to the page indexing report in June 2026

 

The report’s data stopped updating on June 11 and stayed frozen while indexing itself kept running normally, as [Search Engine Land reported](https://searchengineland.com/page-indexing-report-in-google-search-console-delayed-481210). Google confirmed the delay was a reporting problem, and that it had nothing to do with the June 2026 spam update rolling out at the same time.

 ![Here is a screenshot of the report showing it was updated on June 30th, prior it as stuck at June 12th:](https://www.wpconsults.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/image.avif) 

Almost three weeks in, [John Mueller](https://developers.google.com/search/blog/authors/john-mueller)![John Mueller](https://www.wpconsults.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/john-mueller-150x150.avif)John MuellerSpécialiste en référencement, GoogleResponsable de la promotion de Google Search et principal porte-parole officiel du service des relations publiques de Google Search.[LinkedIn](https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnmu)[X](https://x.com/JohnMu)[Centre de recherche](https://developers.google.com/search/blog/authors/john-mueller) said the team was working on it with no ETA. When the report finally caught up, it jumped straight to June 29 data, and [Barry Schwartz’s coverage](https://www.seroundtable.com/google-page-indexing-report-fixed-and-updated-41626.html) noted the odd step down many properties saw once the numbers repopulated.

 

This is not a one-off either. The same report ran a [month-long delay in early 2024](https://searchengineland.com/google-fixed-month-long-delay-with-page-indexing-report-466419), so treating freezes as a recurring behavior of the tool, rather than an emergency, is the realistic posture.

 

## Why a frozen indexing report ends in a cliff, not a slope

 

Google’s own [documentation for the report](https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/7440203) is upfront that it reflects the index with a delay of a few days even in normal weeks. It is a periodically refreshed snapshot of Google’s bookkeeping, not a live counter, and that distinction is the whole story here.

 

During a freeze, pages keep getting indexed and dropped in the background at their usual pace. When the reporting pipeline comes back, all of that accumulated movement lands in a single refresh, so a change that really happened gradually across three weeks renders as one vertical step on the chart.

  

How a report freeze turns into a cliff on the graph

 

1. The page indexing report stops refreshing (June 11)
2. Indexing keeps moving normally in the background
3. Google repairs the reporting pipeline weeks later
4. Three weeks of gradual change land in one refresh
5. The graph draws a cliff that never happened as a cliff

 The June 2026 freeze compressed three weeks of normal index movement into a single datapoint.  

The same mechanic works in the other direction, by the way. Some sites came back from the freeze with a step up in indexed pages, and that jump was no more a sudden win than the drop was a sudden loss.

 

## How to check whether pages actually left Google’s index

 

Four checks, in the order I run them on a client property. Together they take under an hour, and they settle the recount-or-real question with actual evidence instead of a trend line.

 

### 1. Check the indexing report’s own last-updated date first

 

The report prints its freshness right at the top, and that stamp is the first thing to read, not the graph. If the date is weeks old, every conclusion drawn from the chart is a conclusion about stale bookkeeping. During the June freeze that stamp sat at June 11 the whole time, which told you everything the graph could not.

 

### 2. Read impressions in the Performance report against the drop

 

This is the strongest single signal, because Performance data runs on a separate, much fresher pipeline. A page that genuinely leaves the index stops earning impressions, so real deindexing at scale shows up as an impressions decline that tracks the drop.

 

If your indexed count fell off a cliff while impressions stayed flat through the same window, the pages are still serving in search and the cliff is a recount. That mismatch settles most cases on its own.

 

### 3. Inspect a sample of the dropped URLs with URL Inspection

 

Export the not-indexed list from the report, pick 10 to 20 URLs that matter commercially, and run each through URL Inspection. The live verdict there is per-URL ground truth, and it is fresher than the aggregate report that alarmed you.

 

Pay attention to which bucket the report claims they fell into. “Crawled, currently not indexed” on thin or duplicate pages is Google pruning what it never valued, which is a content decision, not a technical emergency.

 

### 4. Confirm Googlebot is still crawling in your server logs

 

Your access logs are the one record Google’s reporting delays cannot touch. If Googlebot kept hitting the supposedly dropped sections at its normal rate through the freeze, the index story and the crawl story disagree, and the logs win. I walk through the full method in my [log file analysis guide](https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/analyse-des-fichiers-journaux-log-file-des-robots-dindexation-crawlers/), and the same pull doubles as a [budget rampant](https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/la-recherche-du-budget-crawl-et-ses-cas-dutilisation/) health check while you are in there.

 

| Signal | Points to a recount | Points to real deindexing |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Report last-updated date | Weeks old, or just refreshed after a gap | Current, updating on its normal cadence |
| Impressions (Performance report) | Flat through the drop window | Declining in step with the indexed count |
| URL Inspection on sampled pages | Sampled URLs still show as indexed | Live tests confirm pages are out |
| Journaux du serveur | Googlebot crawling at its usual rate | Crawl rate collapsed on the affected sections |

The four signals I check after an indexing report drop, and which verdict each one points to. 

## What not to do while the indexing report is stale

 

The reflex moves are the damaging ones. Bulk resubmitting sitemaps does nothing to refresh a frozen report, and hammering Request Indexing across hundreds of URLs burns your quota on pages that were never actually out. Neither action speeds Google up; both just add noise to the picture you are trying to read.

 

The more expensive mistake is shipping site changes to “fix” a problem the data has not confirmed: noindex audits, redirect sweeps, content culls. It is the same panic misread I covered with [fake ranking drops](https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/un-brevet-revele-que-google-piege-les-internautes-en-leur-faisant-miroiter-de-fausses-baisses-de-classement/): reacting to a measurement artifact creates the real damage the artifact only implied. Run the four checks, and if they all point to a recount, the correct action is none.

 

## So, did Google deindex your pages or just recount them?

 

If this were my property, I would bet on the recount and then verify, because after every freeze the base rate leans heavily that way. A frozen stamp, flat impressions, indexed samples, and a normal crawl rate close the case in an hour, and most sites that ran those checks in July found exactly that.

 

The honest caveat: sometimes the drop is real, and the freeze just delayed the news. If impressions fell in step with the count and your sampled URLs test as out, you have a genuine indexing problem to diagnose, and the earlier sections of the report (which buckets grew) tell you where to start digging.

  

### Still not sure what your indexing report is telling you?

 

N'hésitez pas à [nous contacter](https://www.wpconsults.com/fr/travailler-avec-wpconsults/) ou [m'envoyer un courriel](mailto:info.wpconsults@gmail.com) and I will help you read the drop properly before you change anything. Remember, a calm hour of verification is cheaper than a month of undoing panic fixes.

   

## Journal des mises à jour

 

**06 Jul 2026**

 

- Published with the full June 2026 freeze timeline (stuck at June 11, caught up to June 29 data) and the four verification checks for separating a recount from real deindexing.