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Technical SEO 8 min

What is technical SEO: complete guide 2026 - Ighenatt Blog

Learn what technical SEO is, what makes it different from on-page and off-page SEO, and why it is the foundation of any solid ranking strategy in 2026.

EG

Elu Gonzalez

Author

Technical SEO is probably the most misunderstood discipline in web ranking. Many businesses invest thousands of euros in content and links without realising that Google cannot even crawl their site correctly. If the foundations of a building are poorly constructed, it does not matter how beautiful the facade is.

This guide explains what technical SEO covers, how it differs from other branches of SEO and what specific areas you should monitor to ensure your website works as Google expects in 2026.

Definition of technical SEO: what it is and what it is NOT

Technical SEO is the set of optimisations that affect a website’s infrastructure to facilitate its crawling, indexation and rendering by search engines. It is not about writing better content or getting more links: it is about ensuring that the machine underpinning your website works without friction.

This includes aspects such as load speed, server configuration, URL structure, the robots.txt file, XML sitemaps, HTTPS implementation, canonical tags, structured data and internal link architecture.

What technical SEO is not: it is not web design, it is not content writing, it is not link building. These disciplines have their place, but they depend on the technical foundation working correctly. A perfectly optimised article for a high-volume keyword will be of no use if Google cannot index the page where it is published.

The problem of technical invisibility

According to Semrush data, 85% of websites have at least one critical technical error. Most website owners are unaware of these problems because they are not visible when browsing the site: they are only detected with crawling tools or by reviewing Google Search Console reports. A technical SEO audit is the most direct way to identify them.

Technical SEO vs on-page SEO vs off-page SEO: the key differences

To understand where technical SEO fits, it helps to see the three main branches of web ranking as layers of a system:

Technical SEO (infrastructure): Ensures that Google can access, crawl, index and render all pages on the site. Works on the server, source code, speed and architecture.

On-page SEO (content): Optimises each individual page to be relevant to target searches. Includes titles, meta descriptions, headings, keyword density, images with alt text and contextual internal linking.

Off-page SEO (authority): Builds the domain’s reputation through external links (backlinks), brand mentions, social signals and digital public relations.

The three layers are interdependent. Without technical SEO, on-page content may not be indexed. Without quality on-page content, backlinks do not generate thematic relevance. And without off-page authority, it is difficult to compete for keywords with high difficulty.

The 7 pillars of technical SEO in 2026

1. Crawlability

Google has a limited crawl budget for each domain. If your site has thousands of unnecessary URLs, orphan pages or redirect chains, Googlebot wastes that budget on irrelevant pages and may leave the ones that really matter uncrawled.

Key elements are: a correctly configured robots.txt file, updated XML sitemaps, a logical internal link architecture and the absence of crawl traps such as infinite calendars or uncontrolled faceted filters.

2. Indexation

Just because Google crawls a page does not mean it will index it. Incorrectly implemented canonical tags, accidental noindex directives, thin content pages and duplicate content problems prevent your pages from entering the index.

3. Rendering

Sites built with JavaScript (React, Angular, Vue) present an additional challenge: Google needs to render the JavaScript to see the content, and this process consumes more resources than crawling static HTML. If rendering fails, Google sees an empty page.

4. Load speed and Core Web Vitals

Core Web Vitals are three user experience metrics that Google uses as a ranking signal: LCP (load speed), CLS (visual stability) and INP (interactivity). Optimising these metrics requires technical work on images, CSS, JavaScript and server configuration.

5. Security (HTTPS)

HTTPS has not been optional for years. Google marks as “Not secure” pages served over HTTP, and the SSL/TLS certificate is a basic trust requirement for both users and search engines.

6. Internationalisation (hreflang)

Multilingual sites need to correctly implement hreflang tags to tell Google which version of each page to show depending on the user’s language and region. Errors in hreflang cause Google to show the wrong version or ignore the alternatives.

7. Structured data (Schema.org)

Structured data markup helps Google understand the content of each page and enables rich results (rich snippets): star ratings, FAQs, breadcrumbs, product prices. Its correct implementation requires technical validation with tools such as the Rich Results Test.

Why technical SEO matters more now than 5 years ago

The search ecosystem has changed significantly since 2021. Three factors have elevated the importance of technical SEO:

Google processes more JavaScript than ever. The mass adoption of frameworks such as Next.js, Nuxt and Astro has multiplied the number of sites that depend on client-side rendering. This demands that the technical infrastructure be ready for Googlebot to render correctly.

Core Web Vitals have become established as a ranking signal. What started as an experiment in 2021 is now an established part of the algorithm. The replacement of FID by INP in March 2024 demonstrated that Google continues to refine these metrics.

Competition for crawl budget has intensified. With the growth of websites and the mass generation of AI content, Google is more selective about what it crawls. A site with a solid technical foundation has an advantage over competitors that waste crawl budget on low-quality URLs.

Signs that your website has technical SEO problems

You do not need to be an expert to detect the first warning signs. Check these indicators in Google Search Console:

  • Declining indexed pages without having removed content: Google may be stopping indexing URLs due to technical problems.
  • Recurring crawl errors (5xx, 4xx, redirect loops): the server is not responding as Google expects.
  • Load time above 3 seconds in PageSpeed Insights: penalises the user experience and potentially the ranking.
  • Irregular coverage: pages “Discovered, not indexed” or “Crawled, not indexed” in high proportion indicate that Google does not find sufficient value or has technical difficulties.
  • Structured data with errors in the Search Console improvements report.
  • Discrepancy between pages submitted in the sitemap and indexed pages: if you submitted 500 URLs and only 200 are indexed, something is wrong.

If you detect several of these symptoms, it is advisable to request an audit service that diagnoses the root cause.

How a technical SEO audit is carried out

A professional technical SEO audit follows a structured process covering all the areas mentioned. Although tools vary depending on the professional, the typical process includes:

Phase 1: Full site crawl

A crawler such as Screaming Frog, Sitebulb or Lumar is used to crawl all URLs in the domain. The goal is to replicate what Googlebot does and detect accessibility problems, redirects, HTTP errors, duplicate content and orphan pages.

Phase 2: Indexation analysis

Crawl data is cross-referenced with Google Search Console reports to identify discrepancies between what the site publishes and what Google indexes. Canonical problems, accidental noindex and thin content are detected here.

Phase 3: Performance evaluation

Core Web Vitals are measured with both lab data (Lighthouse) and field data (CrUX). Field data is what Google uses to evaluate rankings, but lab data allows diagnosing specific problems.

Phase 4: Security and internationalisation review

HTTPS implementation is verified (certificates, mixed content, HTTP to HTTPS redirects) and, for multilingual sites, the correct configuration of hreflang and canonicals between language versions.

Phase 5: Report and prioritisation

The result is a report that classifies problems by severity (critical, high, medium, low) with specific corrective actions and an implementation roadmap. Critical problems are those that block indexation; low-severity ones are improvement opportunities.

Frequently asked questions about technical SEO


Technical SEO is the foundation that makes everything else work. If your site has crawling, indexation or speed problems, the best content in the world will not help you rank. If a crawl of your site has surfaced any of these issues, the next step is gauging their real scope. Contact our team for a no-obligation technical assessment.

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Frequently Asked Questions

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Tags: #technical SEO #SEO audit #web ranking #Google
EG

Elu Gonzalez

SEO Expert & Web Optimization