At a glance
Low Impression Pages lists, row by row, the indexed URLs that earn very few or no impressions in Search Console’s Performance report. A page that is indexed but barely shown is effectively invisible: it passed the indexing gate but is not surfacing for any meaningful query, which points to thin content, weak internal linking, or poor keyword targeting.
What it tracks
Each row is a URL with its impressions, clicks, and average position drawn from the Search Analytics API, filtered to the low end of the impressions distribution. Low impressions on an indexed page are a different problem from being de-indexed: Google is willing to hold the page but is not ranking it well enough to display it. Common causes are thin or duplicative content, a topic the site has no authority on, no internal links pointing in, or a title and body that target no real search demand. For content teams this is a prioritised pruning-or-improving list: decide per row whether to expand the page, merge it into a stronger one, redirect it, or remove it. Read it next to Pages Not Indexed to separate “indexed but invisible” from “not indexed at all”, and Pages Losing Traffic to catch pages sliding toward this state. A growing low-impression list usually signals content sprawl: more URLs than the site can rank. Trimming or consolidating it often lifts the pages that remain.Reconciling against the source
Recreate this in Search Console, Performance, Search results by switching to the Pages view and sorting by impressions ascending; the lowest rows match this list. The usual caveats apply: 2 to 3 day delay, anonymised rare queries, and the 1,000-row UI cap on the Pages table.Sibling cards
| Card | Why pair it |
|---|---|
| Pages Not Indexed | Distinguishes invisible from un-indexed. |
| Pages Losing Traffic | Pages trending toward low impressions. |
| Indexed Pages | The full indexed population. |
| Top Pages by Impressions | The healthy counterpoint. |