Sitemap Finder

94% of all websites have a hidden sitemap. This tool finds it in 3 seconds. Plus, you get instant results while other marketers are still searching manually.

Sitemap Tool

What do you get with this sitemap finder?

This tool automatically detects all sitemaps from any website. No hassle with manual searching. Just enter the URL and you're done. Download all URLs from your competitors and see which keywords they're trying to rank for.

Perfect for SEO audits, competitor analysis, and checking your own website.

How to find sitemaps manually (5 proven methods)

Want to find sitemaps without a tool? These 5 methods always work:

Method 1: Check website footer

Success rate: 60% for Dutch business websites. Scroll down and look for "sitemap", "site overview" or "website map".

E-commerce sites almost always have this. Additionally, corporate websites often place this under "Service" or "Help".

Method 2: Robots.txt file

Add /robots.txt to the URL: https://yourwebsite.com/robots.txt

Then look for lines starting with "Sitemap:". That's where the full location is.

Method 3: Try standard URLs

Works for 80% of all websites:

  • /sitemap.xml

  • /sitemap

Just paste these after the main URL. WordPress, Drupal and Joomla use this by default.

Method 4: SEO browser extensions

SEOquake, MozBar or Ahrefs toolbar instantly show technical website data. This is especially useful for quick analyses of multiple sites.

Method 5: Google Search Console

Have access? Go to Coverage > Sitemaps. Here you can see all submitted sitemaps for that website.

Why sitemaps are so important for SEO

Websites with sitemaps are indexed completely 3x more often. The numbers don't lie:

  • 40% faster indexing of new content

  • 25% better technical SEO scores on average

  • More complete crawling of all website pages

How Google uses sitemaps

Google crawls through your website more efficiently. A sitemap serves as a guide. It helps with:

Discovering new pages that are hard to find. Moreover, it helps with prioritizing which content is most important. Finally, it supports planning how often pages are re-crawled.

Different sitemap types

  • XML sitemaps: For search engines

  • HTML sitemaps: For website visitors

  • Image sitemaps: For Google Images

  • Video sitemaps: For rich snippets

  • Mobile sitemaps: For mobile-first indexing

Practical sitemap tips

For your own website

Technical requirements:

  • Maximum 50,000 URLs per file

  • Under 50MB size

  • Place in root directory

  • Standard XML format

Maintenance:

  • Update automatically with new content

  • Check monthly for broken links

  • Monitor via Google Search Console

  • Avoid duplicate content in sitemaps

  • A sitemap finder is a tool that automatically finds all sitemaps of a website. You need it because manual searching is time-consuming and you often miss sitemaps. With one click you see the complete structure of any website, perfect for competitor analysis or checking your own site.

  • Yes, sitemaps are public information. They're intended for search engines and anyone can view them. It's comparable to looking at a menu - the information is publicly available. However, you should use the information ethically for analysis, not for stealing content.

      • See which pages they have (find content gaps)

      • Analyze their site structure

      • Get new content ideas

      • Check how often they publish

      • Discover their most important categories

  • No, use it as inspiration, not as a blueprint. Their structure works for their business. Analyze what's good, but adapt it to your situation. Google recognizes copied structures.