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Operador de búsqueda site:
Una consulta site: es un operador de búsqueda que te permite solicitar resultados de búsqueda del dominio, la URL o el prefijo de URL especificados en el operador. Por ejemplo:
Ejemplos de site:
site:example.com
Muestra resultados solo del dominio example.com (www.example.com y recipes.example.com).
site:https://www.example.com/ramen tsukemen
Muestra resultados de páginas que contienen URLs que empiezan por https://www.example.com/ramen y que guardan relación con el término tsukemen.
El operador de búsqueda site: está disponible en todas las propiedades de la Búsqueda de Google.
Usos para propietarios de sitios web
Las consultas site: pueden ayudarte de varias formas a la hora de depurar un sitio. A continuación, se ofrecen algunos ejemplos:
Ejemplos de site:
site:example.com
Devuelve una lista con URLs indexadas y publicadas.
site:https://example.com/recipes/tsukemen.html
Puede ayudarte a comprobar si la URL está indexada y publicada.
site:example.com viagra casino
Ayuda a identificar y monitorizar problemas de spam en el sitio.
site:https://example.com/ limón
Muestra qué URLs del sitio podrían aparecen al buscar el término "limón".
Muestra si una URL específica se ha indexado para el término "limón".
Limitaciones
El operador site: se ha diseñado principalmente para los usuarios de la Búsqueda, por lo que a los propietarios de sitios web les podría resultar restrictivo. En concreto, presenta las siguientes restricciones:
El operador site: no devuelve necesariamente todas las URLs que se han indexado con el prefijo especificado en la consulta. Tenlo en cuenta si quieres utilizar el operador site: para realizar tareas como identificar la cantidad de URLs que se han indexado y publicado con un prefijo.
Un operador site: sin una consulta (por ejemplo, site:example.com) no clasifica los resultados. En general, en la parte superior se muestra la URL más corta que contiene el prefijo, pero los resultados son relativamente aleatorios.
[null,null,["Última actualización: 2025-08-04 (UTC)."],[[["\u003cp\u003eThe \u003ccode\u003esite:\u003c/code\u003e search operator lets you limit Google Search results to a specific domain, URL, or URL prefix.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eSite owners can use the \u003ccode\u003esite:\u003c/code\u003e operator to debug their site, such as checking if a specific URL is indexed or identifying spam issues.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eThe \u003ccode\u003esite:\u003c/code\u003e operator has limitations and may not return all indexed URLs, and results for queries without additional search terms are unranked.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],["The `site:` search operator displays results from a specified domain, URL, or URL prefix. It can identify indexed and serving URLs, check if specific URLs are indexed, and help monitor site spam. Using `site:example.com` shows results from that domain, while `site:https://example.com/recipes/tsukemen.html` targets a specific URL. However, `site:` may not list all indexed URLs and doesn't rank results; results can appear random. Site owners can use the URL Inspection tool if a URL is not shown.\n"],null,["# How To Use the Site Search Operator | Google Search Central\n\n`site:` search operator\n=======================\n\n\nA `site:` query is a search operator that allows you to request search results from\nthe particular domain, URL, or URL prefix specified in the operator. For example:\n\n| `site:` examples ||\n|-----------------------------------------------|----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|\n| `site:example.com` | Show results only from the `example.com` domain (`www.example.com` and `recipes.example.com`). |\n| `site:https://www.example.com/ramen` tsukemen | Shows results for pages that contain URLs that start with `https://www.example.com/ramen` and are relevant to the term tsukemen. |\n\nThe `site:` search operator is available on all Google Search properties.\n| If a URL is indexed in Google, it can show up in search results for `site:` queries that are related to the URL, however it's not guaranteed. If a URL doesn't show in a `site:` query, use the [URL Inspection tool](https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/9012289) to make sure the URL can be indexed and to submit the URL to indexing. Also, double-check the query is correct; `site:https://www.example.com` doesn't return the same results as `site:https://example.com/`.\n\nUses for site owners\n--------------------\n\nA `site:` query can help in a few ways with debugging a site. A few examples:\n\n| `site:` examples ||\n|--------------------------------------------------------|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|\n| `site:example.com` | Returns a list of indexed and serving URLs. | The list of URLs returned is not always exhaustive. Bigger sites shouldn't expect to see all their URLs in the results. A more specific prefix in the query may yield more results than broader prefixes. |\n| `site:https://example.com/recipes/tsukemen.html` | May help you understand whether a specific URL is indexed and served. |\n| `site:example.com viagra casino` | Helps with identifying and monitoring spam problems on your site. |\n| `site:https://example.com/` lemon | Shows which URLs on the site can show up for the term \"lemon\". |\n| `site:https://example.com/recipes/tsukemen.html` lemon | Shows whether the specific URL is indexed for the term \"lemon\". |\n\nLimitations\n-----------\n\n\nThe `site:` operator was designed primarily for search users and so it has some\nrestrictions that site owners might find limiting. Specifically:\n\n- The `site:` operator doesn't necessarily return all the URLs that are indexed under the prefix specified in the query. Keep this in mind if you want to use the `site:` operator for tasks like identifying how many URLs are indexed and serving under a prefix.\n- A `site:` operator without a query (for example `site:example.com`) doesn't rank the results. It will generally show the shortest URL for the prefix at the top, but otherwise the results are relatively random."]]