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Website Launch SEO Checklist for 2026 (43 Points)

A 43-point website launch checklist covering pre-launch SEO setup, launch-day verification, and post-launch monitoring. Prevent the traffic drops, indexing failures, and redirect errors that plague most website launches.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min

What’s in this checklist

  1. Pre-Launch: Technical Setup (12 points)
  2. Pre-Launch: Content & On-Page (10 points)
  3. Pre-Launch: Analytics & Tracking (5 points)
  4. Launch Day: Go-Live Verification (8 points)
  5. Post-Launch: Monitoring & Recovery (8 points)
  6. How to use this checklist
  7. Download the checklist
  8. FAQ
Overview

What does this website launch checklist cover?

43 SEO-specific action items organized by timeline: what happens before launch, on launch day, and in the critical 30 days after.

This website launch SEO checklist walks you through every step that protects your search rankings during a site launch or redesign. According to Digital Silk’s 2026 analysis, 58 distinct items need verification before, during, and after a website launch. We’ve distilled this into 43 SEO-specific action items organized by timeline.
A website launch SEO checklist is a phased set of technical, content, and analytics tasks that must be completed before, during, and after going live to preserve existing search rankings and set the foundation for new organic growth.
Here’s what you get:
  • 12 pre-launch technical checks covering redirects, XML sitemaps, robots.txt, canonical tags, HTTPS, Core Web Vitals, and mobile responsiveness
  • 10 pre-launch content checks for meta tags, header hierarchy, image optimization, internal linking, and keyword mapping
  • 5 analytics & tracking checks for Google Analytics 4, Google Search Console, conversion tracking, and event setup
  • 8 launch-day verification checks for indexing, no-index removal, DNS propagation, and live site validation
  • 8 post-launch monitoring checks for traffic comparison, crawl error detection, ranking tracking, and link reclamation
  • Timeline markers (4 weeks pre-launch through 30 days post-launch)
  • Priority scoring (P1/P2/P3) for every item
Only 39% of websites pass Core Web Vitals thresholds (Advanced Web Ranking, 2025). Every 100-millisecond delay in page load reduces conversion rates by approximately 7% (Deloitte, 2024). Getting the technical foundation right before launch prevents months of cleanup afterward.
Pre-Launch: Technical

What technical SEO setup must happen before launch?

The pre-launch technical phase is where most website launches fail. The single most common mistake: forgetting to remove the no-index tag from the staging environment before going live. This happens more often than you’d expect and leads to complete search invisibility that can take weeks to recover from (Elementor, 2026). Do these 12 checks in the 2-4 weeks before your launch date.
# Check Priority When
1 301 redirect map built: every old URL mapped to its new destination (spreadsheet with old URL, new URL, redirect type) P1 4 weeks before
2 No-index meta tags and X-Robots-Tag headers removed from all production pages P1 1 week before
3 robots.txt file allows crawling of all important pages and blocks only admin/staging areas P1 1 week before
4 XML sitemap generated with only indexable, canonical URLs (no redirects, no 404s, no noindexed pages) P1 1 week before
5 Self-referencing canonical tags on every indexable page P1 2 weeks before
6 HTTPS configured sitewide with valid SSL certificate, HSTS headers, and no mixed content P1 2 weeks before
7 Core Web Vitals passing on staging: LCP under 2.5s, INP under 200ms, CLS under 0.1 P1 2 weeks before
8 Mobile responsiveness tested on 5+ devices (iOS Safari, Android Chrome, tablets) P1 2 weeks before
9 URL structure finalized: lowercase, hyphens, no query parameters for content pages, no trailing-slash inconsistencies P1 4 weeks before
10 Custom 404 page designed with navigation, search, and helpful links (returns proper 404 HTTP status) P2 2 weeks before
11 Pagination handled correctly: rel=”next”/”prev” or load-more pattern, not infinite scroll without fallback P2 2 weeks before
12 Hreflang tags configured for multi-language or multi-region sites P2 2 weeks before
The redirect map (item #1) deserves extra attention. Crawl your existing site with Screaming Frog before you start the redesign, export every URL with its title tag, meta description, and inbound link count. This becomes your source of truth for building redirects. Every URL that has at least one external backlink or ranks for any keyword must have a 1:1 redirect to the most relevant new page. Blanket redirecting everything to the homepage destroys your link equity and rankings overnight.
Pre-Launch: Content

What content and on-page SEO should be ready before launch?

Content migrations are where ranking drops happen. Pages that ranked well on the old site need to maintain their optimized title tags, meta descriptions, header structure, and internal links on the new site. Backlinko’s analysis of 11.8 million Google results (2024) found that pages with the keyword in the title tag rank 3.5x more often in the top 10. Don’t lose that optimization during a redesign.
# Check Priority When
13 Unique title tag on every page (50-60 characters, primary keyword included, brand name at end) P1 2 weeks before
14 Unique meta description on every page (150-160 characters, action-oriented, includes keyword) P1 2 weeks before
15 One H1 per page containing the primary keyword naturally P1 2 weeks before
16 Logical header hierarchy (H1 > H2 > H3) with no skipped levels P1 2 weeks before
17 All images optimized: WebP format, descriptive file names, alt text with context, lazy loading below fold P1 1 week before
18 Internal linking structure mapped: every key page reachable within 3 clicks from the homepage P1 2 weeks before
19 Keyword-to-URL mapping document updated to reflect new URL structure P2 3 weeks before
20 Structured data markup added: Organization, BreadcrumbList, Article/Product/Service schemas as applicable P2 2 weeks before
21 Open Graph and Twitter Card meta tags set for social sharing previews P2 1 week before
22 Content parity check: no pages from old site dropped without a redirect or deliberate decision P1 1 week before
Run a full Screaming Frog crawl of the staging site and compare it against your old site crawl. Look for: pages that exist on the old site but not the new one, title tags that changed unintentionally, and pages that lost their internal links. This 30-minute comparison catches 90% of content migration issues before they affect your live rankings.
Pre-Launch: Analytics

What analytics and tracking need to be configured before launch?

If you launch without analytics, you’re flying blind during the most critical period of your site’s life. Google Analytics 4 needs to be firing on every page, Google Search Console needs your new sitemap, and conversion tracking needs to be validated before a single visitor hits the live site.
# Check Priority When
23 Google Analytics 4 installed and firing on every page (verify via GA4 DebugView or Tag Assistant) P1 1 week before
24 Google Search Console property verified for the new domain/subdomain (or re-verified if URL structure changed) P1 1 week before
25 Conversion tracking configured: form submissions, phone clicks, purchases, key micro-conversions P1 1 week before
26 UTM tracking parameters tested for campaign URLs (no broken parameters on launch-day promotions) P2 3 days before
27 Baseline metrics documented: current organic traffic, top 20 ranking keywords, top 10 landing pages by traffic P1 1 week before
Item #27 is the one most teams skip, and it’s the most important for post-launch comparison. Export your current organic traffic data, keyword rankings, and top landing pages from Google Search Console. Save this snapshot. You’ll need it during week 1 post-launch to identify any pages that lost traffic and need immediate attention.
Launch Day

What should you verify on launch day?

Launch day is about verification, not optimization. Your SEO work should be done in the weeks before. Launch day is a 2-hour QA sprint to confirm everything is working correctly on the live site. Mobile devices account for 60% of global web traffic (Statista, 2025), so test on real phones first, not just desktop browser simulations.
# Check Priority When
28 No-index tags confirmed removed on live site (check page source, not CMS settings) P1 Within 1 hour
29 robots.txt accessible and correct on live URL (visit yourdomain.com/robots.txt directly) P1 Within 1 hour
30 XML sitemap submitted to Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools P1 Within 1 hour
31 Request indexing for top 10-15 most important pages via Google Search Console URL Inspection tool P1 Within 2 hours
32 Redirect map tested: spot-check 20-30 old URLs and verify they 301 to the correct new pages P1 Within 2 hours
33 SSL certificate active and all pages loading over HTTPS (no mixed content warnings in browser console) P1 Within 1 hour
34 Google Analytics real-time report showing active visitors on the new site P1 Within 1 hour
35 DNS propagation confirmed across regions (use a tool like whatsmydns.net to check global propagation) P1 Within 2 hours
Keep a launch-day log. Document the exact time you went live, any issues found, and how they were resolved. This log becomes invaluable if you see ranking fluctuations in the following weeks. Google Search Console data has a 2-3 day delay, so you won’t see the impact of launch-day issues until 48-72 hours later.
Post-Launch

What should you monitor in the 30 days after launch?

The first 30 days post-launch are when ranking drops surface. Google needs to recrawl your entire site, process your redirects, and re-evaluate your content. Expect some volatility in weeks 1-2. The goal of post-launch monitoring is to catch problems early, before a temporary fluctuation becomes a permanent ranking loss.
# Check Priority When
36 Google Search Console crawl stats reviewed: check for spike in crawl errors, 404s, or server errors P1 Days 3, 7, 14, 30
37 Organic traffic compared to pre-launch baseline (by page and by keyword) P1 Days 7, 14, 30
38 Indexation count monitored: “site:yourdomain.com” in Google to track how many pages are indexed P1 Days 3, 7, 14, 30
39 Top 20 keyword rankings tracked daily for the first 2 weeks P1 Days 1-14 daily
40 Broken link audit run on live site using Screaming Frog or Ahrefs Site Audit P1 Day 7
41 Link reclamation: contact sites linking to old URLs that return 404 (not redirected) and request URL updates P2 Days 14-30
42 Core Web Vitals re-tested on live site with real user data (Chrome UX Report via PageSpeed Insights) P2 Day 28+
43 Social profiles, Google Business Profile, and directory listings updated with new URLs if any changed P2 Days 7-14
If you see a ranking drop for a specific page, don’t panic for the first 7-10 days. Google is recrawling and re-evaluating. If the drop persists past day 14, investigate: check whether the redirect is working, whether the new page has the same content depth, and whether internal links to that page are intact. Most post-launch ranking drops trace back to a missing redirect or lost internal links.
How to Use

How do you use this website launch checklist?

This checklist works as a project management tool for your launch. Assign each section to a team member and work through it on the timeline indicated.
  1. 4 weeks before launch: Build your redirect map and finalize your URL structure. These two decisions affect everything downstream. If you’re using a keyword mapping template, update it to reflect the new URLs now.
  2. 2 weeks before launch: Complete all content migration, meta tag optimization, schema markup, and Core Web Vitals testing on the staging site.
  3. 1 week before launch: Install analytics, verify Search Console, prepare your XML sitemap, and do a final robots.txt review. Run a Screaming Frog crawl of staging and compare against the old site crawl.
  4. Launch day: Execute the 8-point verification sprint within the first 2 hours of going live.
  5. Post-launch (days 1-30): Monitor daily for the first 2 weeks, then weekly through day 30. Compare all metrics against your pre-launch baseline.

“We’ve managed over 30 website launches and redesigns. The ones that maintain their rankings all have one thing in common: a comprehensive redirect map built before the first line of code is written. The ones that lose 40-60% of their organic traffic? They built redirects as an afterthought on launch day.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

For a broader SEO foundation beyond the launch process, use our complete 47-point SEO checklist as your ongoing optimization guide. The launch checklist gets you live safely; the SEO checklist keeps you growing afterward.
Expert Insight

Why do website launches fail from an SEO perspective?

At ScaleGrowth.Digital, we’ve seen the same pattern repeatedly. A company invests $50,000-$200,000 in a website redesign, launches with a beautiful new design, and watches their organic traffic drop 30-50% within 2 weeks. The design team celebrated. The marketing team panicked. The root causes are almost always the same: no redirect map (or an incomplete one), staging no-index tags left in place, URL structure changes without corresponding canonical and sitemap updates, and no pre-launch traffic baseline to measure against. These aren’t edge cases. 76% of websites audited have common SEO errors (Content Whale, 2026), and those errors are magnified during a launch. The fix isn’t complicated. It’s this checklist, executed methodically, with dedicated ownership for each section. The cost of prevention (10-15 hours of checklist work) is a fraction of the cost of recovery (3-6 months of lost traffic and revenue).

Download the Full Website Launch SEO Checklist

Get the Google Sheets version with timeline markers, team assignment columns, pass/fail tracking, and a pre-launch vs. post-launch traffic comparison dashboard. Download Free Checklist

Related

Related Resources

Complete SEO Checklist (47 Points)

The full SEO audit checklist for ongoing optimization after your launch. Get Checklist →

Technical SEO Checklist

Deep technical audit covering crawlability, indexation, and Core Web Vitals. Get Checklist →

SEO Audit Template

Run a full SEO audit with scoring across technical, content, and off-page dimensions. Get Template →

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to recover SEO rankings after a website launch?

If your redirects and technical setup are correct, you should see rankings stabilize within 2-4 weeks. Google needs time to recrawl your site and process the changes. If redirects are broken or missing, recovery can take 3-6 months. Sites that follow a pre-launch checklist like this one typically see less than 10% fluctuation, compared to 30-50% drops for unplanned launches.

Do I need to rebuild all my backlinks after a website redesign?

No, if your 301 redirects are set up correctly. A 301 redirect passes the vast majority of link equity from the old URL to the new one. You only need to do link reclamation for pages where the redirect isn’t working or where the old URL returns a 404. After launch, run a backlink audit to identify any high-value links pointing to non-redirected URLs and contact those sites to update the links.

Should I change my URL structure during a website redesign?

Only if the current structure has real problems (dynamic parameters, non-descriptive paths, or deeply nested URLs). Every URL change requires a redirect, and redirects add crawl complexity. If your current URLs are clean and descriptive, keep them. If you must change URLs, do it all at once during the launch rather than in phases. A comprehensive redirect map is non-negotiable.

What’s the biggest SEO mistake during a website launch?

Leaving no-index tags from the staging environment on the production site. This makes your entire site invisible to search engines. The second most common mistake is not building a redirect map, which breaks all existing backlinks and causes ranking drops across the board. Both are preventable with this checklist.

How far in advance should I start SEO preparation for a website launch?

Start 4-6 weeks before launch. The redirect map and URL structure decisions need to happen first (week 1-2), followed by content migration and on-page optimization (week 2-4), analytics setup (week 3-4), and final QA (week 4-6). Rushing this timeline is how ranking drops happen.

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