Orphan Pages in SEO — What They Are and How to Fix Them

Updated June 2026

// Short answer

An orphan page is a page on your website that no other page links to internally. Because search engines discover and rank pages largely by following internal links, orphan pages are crawled rarely, accumulate almost no ranking authority, and often fail to rank at all — even when the content is good.

You can publish a genuinely useful page, do everything right on-page, and still watch it get zero traffic. One of the most common structural reasons is simple: nothing on your own site links to it. That page is an orphan, and search engines treat it accordingly.

What an orphan page is

An orphan page is a URL that exists and may even be in your sitemap, but has no internal links pointing to it from anywhere else on the site. Search engines find and value pages largely by crawling internal links — links are both the discovery path and the carrier of ranking authority. A page outside that link graph is cut off from both.

It’s the structural equivalent of a room in a building with no doors. It exists, but nobody — including Google — can easily get to it.

Why orphan pages hurt your rankings

The result is predictable: orphan pages sit unranked regardless of content quality.

How to find orphan pages

The method is the same whichever tool you use — a set comparison:

  1. List every page that exists — pull your XML sitemap, or run a full crawl, or export URLs from analytics and server logs.
  2. List every page that receives an internal link — this comes from a crawl that records inlinks.
  3. Subtract. Any URL that exists but appears in nobody’s inlinks is an orphan.

A crawl alone won’t find true orphans — because a crawler follows links, it can only reach linked pages. That’s why you compare the crawl against an independent source like the sitemap or analytics.

How to fix orphan pages

For each orphan, decide whether it deserves to rank:

Fixing orphans is one of the highest-ROI structural changes available, because you’re not creating anything — you’re reconnecting pages you already have to the link graph that decides whether they rank.

A site architecture audit finds every orphan on your site in one pass, alongside crawl depth and internal-link problems, and tells you exactly which pages to link from.

FAQ

How do I find orphan pages on my site? +

Compare two lists — every URL in your sitemap (or a full crawl) against every URL that receives at least one internal link. Any page in the first list but not the second is an orphan. Tools like Screaming Frog surface this when you connect a sitemap or analytics source.

Are orphan pages bad for SEO? +

Yes. Orphan pages receive little or no internal PageRank, are crawled infrequently, and signal weak site structure. They rarely rank, and in volume they can dilute how clearly search engines understand your site's hierarchy.

How do you fix an orphan page? +

Add internal links to it from relevant, well-linked pages — ideally from a topic pillar or category page that already has authority. If the page has no purpose, redirect or remove it instead of leaving it stranded.