{"id":2863,"date":"2022-01-31T11:28:34","date_gmt":"2022-01-31T11:28:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cherylroll.com\/google-releases-url-inspection-tool-api-379530\/"},"modified":"2022-01-31T11:28:34","modified_gmt":"2022-01-31T11:28:34","slug":"google-releases-url-inspection-tool-api-379530","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cherylroll.com\/google-releases-url-inspection-tool-api-379530\/","title":{"rendered":"Google releases URL Inspection Tool API"},"content":{"rendered":"
Google has released a new API under the Search Console APIs for the URL Inspection Tool, the search company announced<\/a> this morning. The new URL Inspection API lets you programmatically access the data and reporting you’d get from the URL Inspection Tool but through software, like any API would.<\/p>\n API limits. <\/strong>The API has limits, so you can’t just run it on every URL on every site in a single day. The API has a 2,000 queries per day and 600 queries per minute limit. So don’t expect to run it against your whole entire one-million page website today. You will have to queue things up or run it on as needed basis.<\/p>\n Use cases. <\/strong>Google provided some use cases for the API, they include:<\/p>\n The results. <\/strong>The API will return indexed information from the URL Inspection Tool including index status, AMP, rich results, and mobile usability. You can see the full list of responses over here<\/a> in the API docs.<\/p>\n More details. <\/strong>You can learn more about this API in the API documentation over here<\/a>. Here is a sample API response:<\/p>\n\n