Website redesign SEO checklist: protect rankings before launch
Last updated 13 July 2026 | Websites for Trades editorial team
2 min readA website redesign can improve leads, speed and trust. It can also wipe out rankings if URLs, metadata, redirects and tracking are treated as launch-day admin. Use this checklist before signing off a rebuild or migration.
If you are still deciding whether to rebuild, start with the small business website cost guide and why cheap websites fail.
1. Crawl the current site before anything changes
Export every live URL, page title, meta description, heading, status code and canonical URL. Mark pages that get leads, backlinks or organic traffic. Those pages need a clear keep, improve or redirect decision.
2. Keep valuable URLs where possible
Changing URLs creates migration risk. If a service page already ranks, improve the content on the same URL unless there is a strong structural reason to move it. When a move is needed, map the old URL to the most relevant new page with a 301 redirect.
3. Preserve search intent, not just copy
A redesign should not turn a focused boiler repair page into a generic services block. Keep the searcher intent, proof, FAQs and calls to action that helped the old page rank. Use the platform comparison guide if the redesign also involves a CMS change.
4. Check technical SEO before launch
- Page titles and meta descriptions are unique and useful.
- Only intentional pages are indexable.
- Canonical tags point to the right URLs.
- XML sitemap includes final production URLs.
- Robots.txt is not blocking the live site.
- Structured data matches visible page content.
5. Protect speed and Core Web Vitals
Redesigns often add oversized images, sliders, chat scripts and tracking tags. Check the pages that matter commercially, not only the homepage. The Core Web Vitals guide explains what LCP, INP and CLS mean in plain English.
6. Rebuild tracking before traffic returns
GA4, form events, phone clicks, call tracking and thank-you pages should be ready before launch. Otherwise you will not know whether the redesign improved leads or simply changed the way enquiries are counted. Use the website ROI tracking guide as the baseline.
7. Review after launch
After launch, check indexation, redirects, forms, calls, map-pack landing links and Search Console coverage. Keep the old crawl and redirect map available for at least the first month so ranking drops can be diagnosed quickly.
Before you approve a redesign, request a free audit if you want an independent view of the SEO risks.
Services that fit this guide
Frequently asked questions
Can a website redesign hurt SEO?
Yes. Rankings can drop when URLs change, redirects are missing, page intent is weakened, metadata is lost or the new site is slower.
What is the most important SEO check before a redesign?
Map every valuable old URL to a keep, improve or 301 redirect decision before launch. Unplanned URL changes are one of the biggest redesign risks.
Should I change platform during a website redesign?
Only if the new platform supports your SEO, editing, speed and conversion needs better than the current one. Platform changes add migration risk.
Related guides
Keep reading guides from the same category.
Core Web Vitals explained for non-developers
LCP, INP, CLS in plain English, and what to ask your developer to fix.
Read guide →How much should a UK small business website cost?
Realistic 2026 price ranges, what each tier includes, and how to avoid paying for the wrong work.
Read guide →Why most cheap websites fail (and what to do instead)
The hidden cost of a £499 website, and how to avoid the cycle of rebuilds.
Read guide →WordPress vs Shopify vs bespoke, which platform should you use?
A practical breakdown for UK small businesses choosing a stack.
Read guide →