Skip to content

Keyword Position Checker


Enter your domain name :


Keywords :


Check Positions upto :

 


Enter keywords in separate line.

Example:
keyword1
keyword2
keyword3



Processing...

About Keyword Position Checker

A keyword position checker tells you exactly where a specific page on your website ranks in Google's search results for a given search term. You enter a domain and a keyword, and the tool returns the position number — position 1 meaning the top organic result, position 10 meaning the last result on the first page, position 11 onwards meaning page two and beyond.

That number matters more than most people realise. According to Backlinko's analysis of over 4 million search results, position 1 on Google captures approximately 39.8% of all clicks for a query. Position 2 gets around 18.7%. By position 10, that figure drops to roughly 1.6%. Results on page two receive less than 1% of total clicks combined.

In other words: if you rank on page two, you are effectively invisible. The difference between position 4 and position 1 for a keyword with 5,000 monthly searches is the difference between roughly 200 visits per month and 1,800 visits per month — from the same content, with no additional advertising spend.

The DigitalSub Pro Keyword Position Checker lets you check these positions for free, for any domain and any keyword, without needing to sign up or connect a Google account.

Google Position Avg. Click-Through Rate Monthly visits (5k search volume) What this means
#1 ~39.8% ~1,990 visits Maximum organic traffic
#2 ~18.7% ~935 visits Strong but half of #1
#3 ~10.2% ~510 visits Decent, clear room to grow
#4 – #5 ~6–7% ~300–350 visits Visible but underperforming
#6 – #10 ~2–4% ~100–200 visits Low — optimisation needed
Page 2+ <1% <50 visits Practically invisible

Source: Backlinko analysis of 4M+ Google search results. CTR varies by query type, SERP features, and device.

How to Use the Tool

Using the checker takes about 30 seconds:

  1. Enter your website's domain (e.g. digitalsub.pro — no need for http:// or www)
  2. Type the keyword you want to check (e.g. "free article rewriter")
  3. Click Check Position
  4. The tool returns your current ranking position in Google for that keyword

You can check any domain — your own site, a competitor's, or a client's. There is no limit on how many checks you run.

Why Your Manual Google Search Is Not Accurate

A very common mistake: searching Google yourself and counting down to your result to find your position. This gives you a misleading number almost every time, for three reasons:

  • Search personalisation: Google tailors results to your browsing history, past clicks, and the sites you visit frequently. If you regularly visit your own website, Google boosts it in your personal results — sometimes by several positions — creating a false impression of where you actually rank for other people.
  • Location bias: Your IP address and device location affect results. Someone in Dhaka may see a completely different ranking order for the same keyword than someone in London, even in incognito mode.
  • Device differences: Desktop and mobile rankings can differ by 3 to 10 positions for the same keyword, because Google's mobile-first indexing creates a separate ranking evaluation for mobile users.

The DigitalSub Pro Keyword Position Checker removes these variables by querying Google as a neutral, depersonalised search — giving you the unbiased position rather than your personalised view.

What the Position Number Tells You — and What It Does Not

A position number is a starting point, not a complete picture. Here is what it can and cannot tell you:

It tells you: where your page currently appears in Google's organic results for that specific keyword, at the time of the check, for a neutralised search.

It does not tell you: how many people are searching for that keyword (search volume), whether a featured snippet, AI Overview, or local pack above your result is absorbing the majority of clicks before reaching your position, or whether your ranking is trending up or down over time.

This is why position checking works best when combined with other data. If you know your position is 4 but your page is getting fewer clicks than expected, the likely culprit is a SERP feature sitting above you. According to recent data from Decoding, AI Overviews reduce position-1 click-through rates by 50% or more when they appear — meaning ranking #1 behind an AI Overview can deliver the same traffic as ranking #5 used to.

Use the position number to identify which pages and keywords need attention. Then look at Google Search Console for the actual click data to understand why a particular position is or is not delivering the traffic you expect.

The "Striking Distance" Method — Your Fastest SEO Wins

One of the most practical uses of a position checker is finding what SEO professionals call "striking distance" keywords — pages that rank between positions 5 and 20. These pages are close to the first page or close to the top of it, meaning a relatively small improvement in content, internal linking, or title tag can push them into a significantly higher-traffic position.

Climbing from position 8 to position 3 on a keyword with 2,000 monthly searches roughly triples the monthly clicks that page receives — from around 60 to around 200 — with no new content, no new links, just targeted improvements to an existing page.

Here is a simple workflow using the checker:

The Striking Distance Workflow

  1. Use the Keyword Position Checker to find pages ranking between positions 5 and 20
  2. For each: open the page and read the title tag — does it match the searcher's intent for that keyword?
  3. Check the word count — is the page shorter and thinner than the pages ranking above it?
  4. Add one focused section that addresses what the top-ranking pages cover but yours does not
  5. Update the title tag to front-load the target keyword within the first 60 characters
  6. Add 2–3 internal links from other pages on your site pointing at this page, using the target keyword as anchor text
  7. Re-check the position in 3–4 weeks using this tool to measure the result

Checking Competitor Positions

The tool works equally well on competitor domains. Enter a competitor's URL and any keyword you both target to see where they rank versus where you rank. This is useful for:

  • Identifying keywords where a competitor ranks on page one but you do not — these are direct traffic-capture opportunities
  • Confirming whether a competitor you are watching has gained or lost ground after publishing new content or after a Google algorithm update
  • Benchmarking your position progress against a specific competitor over time rather than just tracking your absolute number in isolation

To go deeper on what is driving a competitor's rankings, pair the position check with the Backlink Checker to see their inbound link profile, and the Link Analyzer to examine their internal linking structure.

Understanding Ranking Fluctuations

If you check your position today and again in three days and see a different number, that is normal — not a sign that something is broken. Google runs thousands of algorithm adjustments per year, and rankings shift constantly as Google experiments with result ordering, processes new content, and responds to changing user behaviour signals.

A few points worth knowing:

  • Daily fluctuations of 1–3 positions are normal and not worth acting on
  • A sudden drop of 5+ positions across multiple pages at the same time usually corresponds to a Google core update — check the Google Search Status Dashboard to confirm
  • A single page dropping sharply while others stay stable often points to a page-specific issue: thin content, a broken internal link, or a competitor publishing something significantly better on the same topic
  • Rankings that fluctuate wildly between checks on the same day likely reflect Google testing different result orderings for that query — this is common for competitive or ambiguous queries

The practical rule: check positions weekly for your most important keywords, not daily. Daily tracking creates noise. Weekly tracking reveals genuine trends.

Keyword Type Recommended Check Frequency Why
Primary commercial keywords Weekly Direct revenue impact from position changes
Striking distance keywords (pos. 5–20) Every 2 weeks Track improvement after content updates
Long-tail informational keywords Monthly Positions rarely fluctuate dramatically
After publishing or updating a page After 2–3 weeks Google needs time to recrawl and reindex
After a Google core update 48–72 hours after rollout completes Updates take 1–2 weeks to fully roll out

What to Do When Your Position Drops

A ranking drop is a signal that something changed — either on your site, on Google, or among your competitors. Before you do anything, confirm the drop is real by checking twice from different connections 24 hours apart. Single-check drops are often temporary SERP tests that resolve on their own.

If the drop is confirmed and sustained, work through this order:

  1. Check robots and indexing first — Use the Google Index Checker to confirm the page is still indexed. An accidentally introduced noindex directive causes a complete traffic drop and is often missed.
  2. Check who now outranks you — Open the search result manually and read the pages now above yours. Did a competitor significantly update or expand their page? Is there a new authoritative source that was not there before?
  3. Check your page's backlink health — Use the Backlink Checker to confirm you have not lost important inbound links that were previously supporting the page's authority.
  4. Improve the content, not just the SEO signals — If a competitor's page is genuinely better — more detailed, more recent, more useful — updating your content to be more comprehensive is the most durable fix. Technical tweaks to a thin page rarely restore rankings that were lost to better content.
  5. Review your meta tags — Use the Meta Tags Analyzer to confirm your title and description are still correctly set and have not been altered by a CMS update.

Tools That Work Well Alongside This One

Checking your position gives you the starting point. These tools help you understand why you are where you are and what to do next:

Backlink Checker Google Index Checker Meta Tags Analyzer Keyword Density Checker Link Analyzer Keywords Suggestion Tool Domain Authority Checker

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my position look different when I search Google myself? +

Because Google personalises its results for every user based on their search history, previous site visits, location, and device. If you visit your own website frequently, Google learns that you find it relevant and pushes it higher in your personal results. The Keyword Position Checker queries Google without this personalisation layer, returning a more neutral reading of where you actually rank for most users.

My page ranks on page 1 but I am getting almost no traffic from it. Why? +

Three common causes. First, a SERP feature — AI Overview, featured snippet, People Also Ask boxes, or a local pack — sits above your organic result and captures a large share of clicks before users reach your position. Second, the keyword has very low actual search volume despite looking competitive. Third, your title tag or meta description is not compelling enough relative to the competing results beside yours. Check your Google Search Console data for the actual click-through rate on that keyword. If impressions are high but clicks are low, improving your title and description is the fastest fix.

My position changes every time I check it. Is that normal? +

Small day-to-day fluctuations of 1 to 3 positions are completely normal. Google continuously experiments with result ordering, processes new content from competitors, and responds to user behaviour signals. These micro-fluctuations rarely mean anything actionable. What matters is the trend over 3 to 4 weeks. If your average position is improving over that window, your SEO efforts are working. If it is declining consistently, that is worth investigating.

How long does it take to see a position improvement after updating a page? +

Usually 2 to 6 weeks for Google to recrawl, process, and reflect content changes in rankings. For high-traffic pages that Google crawls frequently, changes can show up in 3 to 5 days. For newer or lower-traffic pages, it can take a month or longer. To speed up the process, submit the updated URL for recrawling via Google Search Console's URL Inspection tool immediately after updating the page.

Can I check positions for keywords I do not currently rank for? +

Yes. If your domain does not rank in the top 100 results for the keyword you enter, the tool will report that no position was found. This is useful information — it tells you which keywords are entirely unaddressed on your site versus which ones you have partial but improvable visibility for.

Does this check desktop rankings or mobile rankings? +

The tool checks desktop search results by default. Be aware that mobile rankings can differ by 3 to 10 positions for the same keyword, because Google's mobile-first indexing evaluates the mobile version of your page separately. For most informational queries, the gap is small. For local or transactional queries — where mobile intent differs from desktop — the difference can be more significant. If mobile traffic is a priority for your site, verify your mobile rankings manually using an incognito window on a mobile device in addition to using this tool.

Is this tool free and are there any usage limits? +

Yes, completely free. No account required, no daily limits, no premium tier. You can check as many keyword-domain combinations as you need without any cost or restriction. All 47 tools on DigitalSub Pro follow the same approach.

Position → Recommended Next Action

Position 1–3

Protect: build more links to this page, update content annually, monitor for new competitors entering above you.

Position 4–7

Optimise title tag, add a missing section, build 2–3 more backlinks to this specific URL. High ROI zone.

Position 8–20

Striking distance. Expand the page content, improve internal linking from related pages, fix any thin sections.

Page 2+ or not found

Research why top results outrank you. Consider rewriting the page, targeting a more specific variant, or building more links first.