How to find, submit, and troubleshoot Wix sitemaps for pages, blog posts, products, and multilingual sites.
This guide is for small business owners and marketers running wix websites.. The goal is simple: show wix users how to verify automatic sitemap generation and indexing settings.
What This Solves
Sitemap and indexing issues usually come from mismatched signals: a URL is submitted but blocked, published but not canonical, discoverable but thin, or technically valid but not useful enough to deserve crawl attention. This page gives you a focused checklist for that exact problem area.
What to Check
- Open /sitemap.xml on the custom domain.
- Review page-level indexing settings.
- Check blog, product, and multilingual URLs separately.
Common Mistakes
- Submitting temporary Wix URLs.
- Accidentally hiding important pages from search.
- Creating many similar local or service pages.
How to Prioritize the Fix
Start with the highest-value pages first: homepage, money pages, product or service pages, category pages, and articles already receiving impressions. Fixing a small set of important URLs usually produces a clearer result than changing thousands of low-value URLs at once.
After each fix, crawl the affected URLs, confirm the live HTTP status, check canonical and robots signals, then resubmit or monitor the relevant sitemap in Search Console. If the issue appears across many pages, fix the template or generator rather than editing individual URLs manually.
Bottom Line
Keep the sitemap focused on crawlable, canonical, useful pages. The more consistently your sitemap, robots rules, internal links, and page templates agree, the easier it is for search engines to process the site.
Next step: find the sitemap on any website.