Lesson 23
Canonical URLs (Plain-English Explanation)
What you’ll learn
By the end of this lesson, you’ll understand:
What a canonical URL is
Why canonical URLs exist
When you need to worry about them — and when you don’t
What a canonical URL is
A canonical URL tells search engines:
“This is the main version of this page.”
It’s used when:
- Multiple URLs show very similar content
- You want to avoid confusion about which version should rank
Canonical URLs help search engines choose the correct page, not penalise duplicates.
Why canonical URLs matter
Without canonicals, search engines may:
- Split signals across similar pages
- Index the “wrong” version
- Treat pages as duplicates unintentionally
Canonicals help consolidate understanding.
Common situations where canonicals are used
Canonical URLs are often relevant when:
- The same content appears under multiple URLs
- Pages can be accessed with tracking parameters
- Filtered views generate multiple URLs
- CMSs create alternative paths to the same content
In many modern CMSs, canonical URLs are handled automatically.
When you probably don’t need to worry
As a site owner or editor, you usually don’t need to manually manage canonicals if:
- Your CMS sets them automatically
- You’re not creating duplicate pages intentionally
- Each page has a clear, unique purpose
Over-managing canonicals can create more problems than it solves.
What not to do
Avoid:
- Setting canonicals without understanding why
- Pointing canonicals to unrelated pages
- Using canonicals to “hide” poor content
Canonicals clarify relationships — they don’t fix weak pages.
A helpful mindset
Think of canonicals as:
A label saying “this is the original copy.”
If there’s only one copy, the label usually isn’t needed.