Fix Low Confidence Results in Mobile-Friendly for Crawlers
Low-confidence results in Mobile-Friendly for Crawlers usually mean weak technical signals, incomplete structured data, or shallow page content. Strengthen both crawlability and content depth.
Common causes
- Thin content or low signal-to-noise ratio on key pages.
- Structured data missing, invalid, or inconsistent with page content.
- Slow response time or unstable fetch behavior during crawl checks.
How to fix
- Expand content depth and align headings with user intent.
- Fix schema/metadata mismatch and ensure machine-readable consistency.
- Improve performance baseline (TTFB, cache, redirect chain).
Common errors
ValidationError: Invalid input payload in mobile-friendly-for-crawlersFetchError: Timeout while requesting target URL for mobile-friendly-for-crawlersParseError: Unsupported response format detected by mobile-friendly-for-crawlers
FAQ
- Why does Mobile-Friendly for Crawlers return weak results?
- Weak results usually indicate missing baseline signals (crawlability, schema, or clean input). Validate prerequisites and rerun the check.
- How do I improve Mobile-Friendly for Crawlers reliability in production?
- Use stable URLs, valid structured data, and consistent machine-readable files. Re-test after each fix to confirm signal improvement.
Related tools
- TTFB for Crawlers
Measure Time To First Byte for any URL. Fast TTFB helps AI crawlers index your page. Free TTFB checker. Enter URL.
- No-JS Fallback Checker
Check if content is available without JavaScript. Crawlers need static HTML. Free no-JS fallback checker for AI visibility.
- Free AEO Checker – AI Visibility Analyzer
Free AEO checker and visibility checking tool. One URL: check llms.txt, robots, tools.json, FAQ schema, TTFB. Get AI visibility score. AEO analyzer – no signup.
- Free Schema Markup Checker – FAQ, HowTo, Organization
Free schema markup checker and FAQ schema validator. Check FAQPage, HowTo, Organization JSON-LD. Get schema score. Schema markup analyzer – no signup.