HTTP 503: Handling site maintenance correctly for SEO
Sometimes, your site will need some downtime, so you can fix things or update plugins. Most of the time, this tends to be a relatively short period in which Google will most likely not attempt to crawl your website. However, in the case that you need more time to get things fixed, chances are much higher that GoogleBot might come for a visit and be confronted with a website that’s down. So how do we prevent Google from deranking your website?
HTTP status codes and you
For those not familiar with HTTP status codes, here’s a brief summary of the ones that apply to you when dealing with site maintenance:
- 200 OK. This status code dictates that the server was successful in returning a response.
- 301 Moved permanently. This tells the browser that this page is no longer valid and will redirect to the correct page.
- 302 / 307 Moved temporarily. There’s some history behind these two HTTP status codes, but what this dictates to the browser is that you’ll temporarily be redirecting the browser to a different page and that the current URL will eventually be back to its former state.
- 404 Not Found. This status code means that the page you were trying to navigate to, couldn’t be found.
- 410 Content Deleted. Use this if you deleted your content on purpose and there will be no replacement. Find out more about how to delete pages properly.
- 503 Service unavailable. This is the one you want to be returning to Google when you’re dealing with site maintenance. It tells Google that you are in fact working on this page or that something else went wrong. Google knows that when this status code is returned, to check the page again later on. This is what we’ll be discussing a bit more.
Please note that Google will consider pages returning the 200 HTTP status code, despite there being an error (or very little content) on the page, as a “soft 404” in Google Search Console.
Read more: HTTP status codes »
Telling Google you’re busy
If Google runs into a 404 while crawling your site, it’ll usually toss out that page from the search results until it comes back the next time to verify the page is back. However, if Google repeatedly runs into a 404 on that specific page, it’ll eventually postpone re-crawling which means that more time will pass before the page returns in the search results.
To overcome this potential longer loss of rankings, you need to return a 503 status code whenever working on a particular page. The original definition of the 503 status code, according to this RFC, is:
The server is currently unable to handle the request due to a temporary overloading or maintenance of the server. The implication is that this is a temporary condition which will be alleviated after some delay. If known, the length of the delay MAY be indicated in a Retry-After header. If no Retry-After is given, the client SHOULD handle the response as it would for a 500 response.
What this means is that returning a 503 in combination with a Retry-After
header, which will tell Google how many minutes to wait before coming back. This does not mean Google will crawl again in exactly X minutes, but it’ll ensure Google doesn’t come back around to take a look anytime before then.
Adding the header
If you want to implement the header, there are a few options you can choose from.
Using the WordPress defaults
By default, WordPress already returns a 503 when updating plugins or WordPress core. WordPress allows you to override the default maintenance page by adding a maintenance.php
to your wp-content/
directory. Please note that you’ll then be responsible for properly returning the 503 header. Plan on doing database maintenance? You’ll have to take care of that as well. Add a db-error.php
file to your wp-content/
and make sure that you also properly return a 503 header here as well.
If you’re looking to add something fancier to your WordPress website, check out WP Maintenance Mode. This plugin also adds a lot of extra features, besides what we mentioned in the previous section.
If you’re just writing your own code and want a solution that’s easy to implement, you can add the following snippet to your codebase and call it in the code that determines if you’re in maintenance mode:
function set_503_header() { $protocol = 'HTTP/1.0'; if ( $_SERVER['SERVER_PROTOCOL'] === 'HTTP/1.1' ) { $protocol = 'HTTP/1.1'; } header( $protocol . ' 503 Service Unavailable', true, 503 ); header( 'Retry-After: 3600' ); }
Note that the 3600
in the code snippet dictates the delay time in seconds. That means that the above sample will tell GoogleBot to return after an hour. It’s also possible to add a specific date and time in Retry-After
, but you need to be careful with what you add here, as adding a faulty date might result in unexpected results.
Pro-tips
Caching
There are a few things you need to take into consideration when working with maintenance pages and returning 503 status codes. If you actively use caching, you might run into a situation where the cache isn’t properly passing on the 503 status, so please make sure you test this properly, before actively using this on the live version of your website.
Robots.txt
Did you know it’s also possible to return a 503 status code for your robots.txt? Google states in its robots.txt documentation that you can temporarily suspend crawling by throwing a 503 for your robots.xt file. The biggest advantage to this is less server load during maintenance periods.
Handle your maintenance well!
As we have seen, you can avoid losing rankings by adding a 503 when you’re doing site maintenance, to let Google know it can come back to crawl your site later. There are several ways to do this. Pick what works best for you, and you’ll have a well-maintained site with no danger of losing rankings. Good luck!
Keep reading: Which redirect should I use? »
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