Get a Notion site indexed by Google (Notion, Super.so & friends)
Notion is a wonderful place to write and a tricky place to be found. A page published straight from Notion (the notion.site URL) has weak SEO controls and a structure search engines struggle with. Tools like Super.so, Potion, and Bullet exist precisely to turn Notion content into a properly indexable website. Here's how to get either route into Google.
Why raw Notion pages barely index
- Limited control over titles, meta descriptions, and canonical tags on native notion.site pages.
- Heavy client-side rendering — content arrives via JavaScript, which slows and complicates crawling.
- Slow load times and large payloads that hurt Core Web Vitals.
- No custom sitemap control and limited internal-link structure for Google to follow.
The fix: use a Notion-to-site tool with a custom domain
- Publish through Super.so (or a similar tool) to get server-rendered HTML, proper meta tags, and faster loads.
- Connect a custom domain so you're building equity on your own domain, not a notion.site subdomain.
- Set per-page SEO titles and descriptions in the tool's settings.
- Make sure the tool generates a sitemap, and submit it in Search Console.
If SEO matters at all, treat a bare notion.site page as a draft, not a published site. The lack of meta control, the JS-heavy rendering, and the shared subdomain make it a poor indexing target. A custom domain plus a rendering layer is the difference between 'technically online' and 'findable on Google.'
Get it crawled and confirmed
Once your Notion site is on a custom domain you've verified in Search Console, push your key pages through the Indexing API and run status checks to confirm they're indexed. Re-publishing in Notion often regenerates URLs or markup — after big edits, re-check status so you catch anything that dropped out.
Sign in with Google, paste your URLs, ship them through Google's Indexing API. Free daily quota, $9.99 for a 50-URL pack.
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