Redirect chains error on the home page URL
-
Hello Everyone,
I'm getting redirect chains error on the home page URL:
http://ebitdacatalyst.com in Wordpress. I've checked my redirection list in the plugin, and haven't found any redirections on http://ebitdacatalyst.com. Can anyone please help me in solving this issue? I don't know where from it's coming. -
@dazonntechnolog Thanks!
-
@DanialVettori Thanks! It's of great help!
-
@bilalkhanmiani Can you share the solution?
-
I'm really new to SEO, can you help me with this? What is the method to rank higher on Google for my keywords of interest?
-
redirect chains error also appeared on the home page of my website but I solved it manually and now the home page of my website is working I appealed to the WordPress forum from there I got this Complete solution found.
-
Redirect chains can occur when there are multiple redirects configured for a single URL, leading to a series of redirects before reaching the final destination. This can sometimes cause issues such as slower page loading times or SEO penalties.
To troubleshoot and resolve the redirect chains error on your WordPress website, you can follow these steps:
Check .htaccess file: Sometimes, redirects are configured directly in the .htaccess file of your website. You can access this file via FTP or File Manager in your web hosting control panel. Look for any redirect rules and make sure there are no unnecessary or conflicting redirects.
WordPress Plugins: While you've checked the redirection list in your plugin, it's worth double-checking all installed plugins for any that might be causing unwanted redirects. Deactivate plugins one by one and test to see if the issue resolves.
Theme Functions: Some WordPress themes may have custom functions that handle redirects. Review your theme's functions.php file for any redirect-related code and ensure it's configured correctly.
Check WordPress Settings: In your WordPress dashboard, navigate to Settings > General and ensure that the WordPress Address (URL) and Site Address (URL) fields are correctly set to
Browser Cache: Clear your browser cache or try accessing your website in a different browser to ensure the redirect issue isn't caused by cached redirects.
SEO Plugins: If you're using an SEO plugin like Yoast SEO or Rank Math, check their settings for any configured redirects and ensure they're set up correctly.
Server Configuration: Sometimes, redirects can be configured at the server level. If you have access to server configuration files (such as Apache's httpd.conf), check for any redirects configured there.
Search for Hardcoded URLs: Review your website's content and template files for any hardcoded URLs that might be causing unintentional redirects.
WordPress Debugging: Enable WordPress debugging to see if any errors related to redirects are being logged. You can do this by adding the following line to your wp-config.php file:
sql
Copy code
define( 'WP_DEBUG', true );
Consult with a Developer: If you're unable to identify the cause of the redirect chains or if you're uncomfortable making changes to your website's code, consider consulting with a WordPress developer or technical support for further assistance.By systematically checking these potential sources of redirects, you should be able to identify and resolve the redirect chains error on your WordPress website.
Best Regards,
Danial Vettori. -
When you redirect too many times in a row, Google stops following your redirects, which is known as a redirect chain. These are what are known as networked web difficulties that affect users' experiences, cause problems for search engines, and affect your page rankings. It's important to address redirect chains as soon as possible because they might affect both SEO and site performance. This problem reports URLs that lead to multiple redirections.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Unsolved WP YoastSEO Plugin
We just updated our sites WP YoastSEO plugin one day prior to the Moz weekly crawl. Not sure if our change interrupted our weekly Moz crawl or if it was an issue with Moz. The Moz weekly crawl, weekly email notifications were not received and all Moz campaign reports were not updated. I would like to run a crawl immediately. How can I do so before waiting for the next MOZ crawl?
Product Support | | dctomten0 -
How to Boost Your WordPress Website Speed to 95+ (Without Premium Plugins)
I'm reaching out for some advice on improving my WordPress website's speed. I'm currently using a free theme for this fusion magazine and aiming for a score of 95+ on Google PageSpeed Insights. I'm aware that premium plugins can significantly enhance performance, but I'm hoping to achieve similar results using primarily free solutions and manual optimizations.
Technical SEO | | mohammadrehanseo0 -
Unsolved 301 Redirect chain http>https>https:/www
Dear community, I have the same issue with redirecting chain from http - https and then to https:// www.____
On-Page Optimization | | Damian_Ed 0
In one of the previous opened discussions the solution given was: you'd update the server level rule to point directly to the end URL form.
Re: 301 Redirect chain Are there any tutorials or resources available to help me properly implement this solution and resolve this issue? Tags: 301 Redirects, HTTPS, WWW, Server Level Rule, Redirect Chain Any tutorials how to do it properly to resolve this issue ?0 -
Unsolved Question about a Screaming Frog crawling issue
Hello, I have a very peculiar question about an issue I'm having when working on a website. It's a WordPress site and I'm using a generic plug in for title and meta updates. When I go to crawl the site through screaming frog, however, there seems to be a hard coded title tag that I can't find anywhere and the plug in updates don't get crawled. If anyone has any suggestions, thatd be great. Thanks!
Technical SEO | | KyleSennikoff0 -
Google Indexed = 35, 445 pages, Bing Indexed = 243 pages... Why?
Dear MozSquad, Can anyone check our site and let me know if there's anything super apparent that would cause Bing to treat us like a bum on the street? I recently made some structural changes which really helped with Google, but Bing didn't even budge. It's a lot harder to keep up with all the SEO initiatives I have in mind with it being a small start-up where I'm responsible for planning the entire Internet Marketing campaign, giving constant input on UX and site design, etc on top of 900 other things, so I figured it'd be a good time to use The Moz to help a brother out. Ideas? Domain: homeandgardendesignideas.com (yeah, I know it's a little long =P)
On-Page Optimization | | zDucketz0 -
Is reported duplication on the pages or their canonical pages?
There are several sections getting flagged for duplication on one of our sites: http://mysite.com/section-1/?something=X&confirmed=true
On-Page Optimization | | Safelincs
http://mysite.com/section-2/?something=X&confirmed=true
http://mysite.com/section-3/?something=X&confirmed=true Each of the above are showing as having duplicates of the other sections. Indeed, these pages are exactly the same (it's just an SMS confirmation page you enter your code in), however, they all have canonical links back to the section (without the query string), i.e. section-1, section-2 and section-3 respectively. These three sections have unique content and aren't flagged up for duplications themselves, so my questions are: Are the pages with the query strings the duplicates, and if so why are the canonical links being ignored? or Are the canonical pages without the query strings the duplicates, and if so why don't they appear as URLs in their own right in the duplicate content report? I am guessing it's the former, but I can't figure out why it would ignore the canonical links. Any ideas? Thanks0 -
SEO Value of Within-Page Links vs. Separate Pages
Title says it all. Assuming that you're talking about similar content (let's say, widgets), which is better: using within-page links for variations or using separate pages? I.e., do we have a widget page and then do in-page links to describe green, blue, and red widgets, or separate pages for each type of widget? In-page pro: more content on a single page, thus more keywords, key phrases, and general appearance of real content. In-page con: Jakob Neilsen says they're confusing. Also, for SEO, you only get one page title, rather than a separate page title for each. My personal bias is for in-page, since I hate creating dozens of short pages for what could be on one page, but my suspicion is that separate pages are better for SEO.
On-Page Optimization | | maxkennerly0 -
Why isn't SEOMoz using File Extensions (*.html etc) on any of their web page URLs?
...and what is the SEO benefit of this? This video from Matt Cutts suggests using file extentions, except for a directory.
On-Page Optimization | | magicrob0