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Technical and on-page SEO audit

Find every issue before rankings do.

Serpvision crawls your site, surfaces technical and on-page issues by severity, and connects them to ranking and Search Console data so you fix the right things first.

No credit card required. Usage-based pricing. Audit on your schedule.

app.serpvision.com/projects/store/audit

Pages crawled

312

Last scan: today

Critical

7

fix first

Warnings

34

review needed

Issue Pages
Missing meta descriptions 28
Broken internal links 5
Duplicate title tags 11
Missing H1 tags 9

Suggested next step

Fix 5 broken internal links and deduplicate 11 title tags — these affect crawl budget and SERP appearance.

Full site crawl

Every page, every issue

Severity ranking

Fix the right things first

Link analysis

Internal and external

Repeat on schedule

Track audit progress

Why site audits matter

Technical issues cost rankings silently

Most SEO problems are not obvious until rankings drop. Auditing regularly catches them early and helps you prioritize fixes by impact.

Catch issues before they spread

A missing redirect, a broken link, or a duplicate title can quietly affect dozens of pages. Auditing regularly surfaces these before they compound.

Prioritize by severity, not volume

Not all issues matter equally. Serpvision groups problems by severity so your team spends time on the fixes that actually move rankings.

Track progress after fixes

Re-running an audit after a sprint shows you what improved, what remains, and whether new issues appeared during development work.

Audit coverage

Everything a healthy SEO site needs checked

Serpvision checks technical foundations, on-page signals, and crawlability — the three areas that affect how search engines read and rank your site.

Crawl and status codes

Find 4xx errors, redirect chains, blocked pages, and crawl traps that stop search engines from fully indexing your site.

Titles and meta descriptions

Identify missing, duplicate, too-short, or too-long title tags and meta descriptions across every crawled page.

Heading structure

Check H1 usage, skipped heading levels, and multiple H1s that can dilute relevance signals for a page.

Internal links

Find broken internal links, orphaned pages, and poor link distribution that leaves pages without enough internal authority.

Image optimization

Spot missing alt attributes, oversized images, and non-descriptive filenames that reduce accessibility and on-page signals.

Canonical and indexability

Check canonical tags, noindex directives, and robots signals to make sure the right pages get indexed and the wrong ones are excluded.

Workflow

From crawl to fix list

The audit is built around decisions, not just numbers.

1

Add your project

Set the domain and configure the crawl scope in your project settings.

2

Run the crawl

Serpvision crawls your pages and collects technical and on-page signals.

3

Review issues

Filter by severity, category, or affected page count to decide what to fix first.

4

Re-audit and track

Run follow-up audits to confirm fixes held and catch anything new after deploys.

Use cases

Who uses site audits the most

SEO specialists

Audit client sites before an engagement starts, track issue resolution over the project, and demonstrate progress in reviews.

Development teams

Run audits after deploys to catch introduced issues such as accidental noindex, broken redirects, or missing meta tags.

Content teams

Use audit data to find pages with weak titles, missing descriptions, or poor heading structure that hold back content performance.

Business owners

Get a clear picture of your site's technical health without needing to interpret raw crawler data or multiple SEO tools.

FAQ

Site audit questions

For actively managed sites, a monthly audit is a good baseline. After major deploys, content migrations, or CMS updates, run an immediate follow-up to catch issues introduced by the change.

No. Serpvision finds and prioritizes issues. Fixes are applied in your CMS, codebase, hosting setup, or redirect configuration. Re-running the audit afterward confirms the fix is in place.

The crawl scope can be configured in project settings to focus on a subdirectory or URL pattern, which is useful for large sites or when you are testing a specific section after changes.

Yes. Serpvision connects audit findings with ranking movement so you can investigate whether a position drop matches a technical issue found on the same page.

Critical issues directly harm crawlability or indexing, such as broken links, 404 errors, and duplicate titles on key pages. Warnings are on-page issues that reduce quality signals but do not block indexing outright.

Audit your site and know where to start.

Create a project, run a crawl, and get a prioritized list of issues to fix — with ranking and Search Console context alongside.

No credit card required. Usage-based pricing.