SEO Fundamentals 4 min read

Crawl Budget

Definition

Crawl budget is the amount of attention Google is likely to spend crawling your site over a period of time. It is how many URLs Google can and wants to visit before moving on. Google explains crawl budget as a mix of crawl rate and crawl demand. It also says this is mainly a concern for very large or frequently updated sites. For many smaller sites, keeping your sitemap updated and monitoring index coverage is usually enough.

Why is crawl budget important for fitness and wellness brands?

Fitness and wellness websites tend to create dozens of dedicated pages (class pages, trainer pages, location pages, blog tags, product filters, supplement variants, campaign URLs, and so much more.) These can all add up quickly.

When that happens, Google can end up crawling pages that aren't relevant to your business goal, or even pages that won't contribute significantly to your organic traffic. All the while, your key service, product, and content pages get less attention.

How to help Google crawl the right pages on your site

Start by deciding which pages need the most search visibility and which ones should get priority, in line with your business goals. That's usually core service pages, main product pages, key location pages, and your best educational content.

Then make sure your sitemap prioritizes these. That means only including the most important pages. Google will likely still find the rest if you have good internal linking, but since your sitemap is a major directory, that's where the crawler starts.

Additionally, Google specifically recommends listing canonical URLs in your sitemap, because that helps search engines understand which version you want treated as the main one.

How to talk to your agency about this

Questions to ask your agency

"How many duplicate, low-value, and non-converting URLs do we have on our sitemap? How are we allocating our crawl budget and focusing on the most important revenue-driving pages?"