Stephanie LeVonne says, “You’ve probably heard the phrase “duplicate content” being thrown around from time to time, and like any savvy webmaster, you’d never dare to publish the same content twice — but have you?

Duplicate content is the equivalent of overdrawing your checking account, except instead of paying costly fees each month you’ll be sacrificing your precious crawl budget. Manifesting itself in several forms, duplicate content may be one of the most elusive and widely overlooked problems that can affect your site’s ability to rank. It oftentimes stems from a sites’ information architecture or CMS limitations — which likely means it wasn’t deliberate.

Unfortunately, there is no simple check in Google Search Console that will flag this issue for you. Even the most advanced third-party tools don’t always do a good job of finding duplicate content — especially when the source is internal.

Here are eight potential sources of duplicate content that could be affecting your site:

1. HTTP and HTTPS URLs

One of the quickest ways to check if your site has two live versions being indexed is to try and visit the site using both the HTTP and HTTPS protocol“.

Don’t get duped by duplicate content: 8 quick checks for every SEO

Search Engine Land

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