Paste a list of URLs and instantly generate a valid XML sitemap that Google, Bing and other search engines can crawl. Download the file and upload it to your site's root — no other tools needed.
An XML sitemap is a structured list of every URL you want search engines to index, along with metadata like the last modification date, change frequency, and priority. Submitting a sitemap to Google Search Console accelerates discovery of new pages and helps Google understand your site structure. It's especially valuable for new sites, large sites with many pages, and sites with complex internal linking.
Paste your URLs (one per line) into the textarea. Pick a default change frequency (weekly/monthly/daily). The tool builds a valid sitemap.xml with current lastmod dates, default priority of 0.8, and your selected changefreq. Download the file or copy the XML, then upload sitemap.xml to your site root and submit the URL in Google Search Console.
Generate a fresh sitemap whenever you launch a site, after publishing a batch of new pages, after a URL migration, or as part of a quarterly SEO maintenance routine. For sites that change frequently, automate sitemap generation with your CMS instead of doing it manually.
Submit your sitemap.xml URL via Google Search Console under Sitemaps. Reference it in your robots.txt with `Sitemap: https://yoursite.com/sitemap.xml`. Keep individual sitemaps under 50,000 URLs and 50 MB — split into multiple sitemaps with a sitemap index file for larger sites.
Smaller sites can get away without one, but it accelerates indexing of new pages and surfaces orphan pages Google might miss.
Whenever you publish or update meaningful pages. CMS-generated sitemaps update automatically; static sitemaps need to be regenerated manually.
A 0.0–1.0 hint to search engines about relative importance of pages on your site. Most engines treat it loosely; default 0.8 is fine for most pages.
Explore more website management tools on the tool hub — or jump straight to the Website SEO Score Checker, Online Ping Website Tool, Page Speed Test.