If you’ve discovered that broken URLs on your website are redirecting visitors to the homepage, you’re not alone.
In fact, this is one of the most common technical SEO issues we encounter during website audits. Business owners often assume that sending users to the homepage is better than showing a “Page Not Found” error. At first glance, that logic seems reasonable. After all, why show an error page when you can keep visitors on the site?
The problem is that search engines don’t always see it that way.
When a deleted page redirects to a destination that isn’t closely related to the original content, Google may classify it as a soft 404 error. Over time, this can create crawling inefficiencies, indexation problems, diluted ranking signals, and a confusing experience for users who expected to find specific information.
We’ve seen this issue affect ecommerce stores after product removals, SaaS websites after content cleanups, publishers after URL restructures, and businesses following website migrations. In many cases, the homepage redirect was implemented with good intentions—but it ended up creating larger SEO problems than the original 404 page.
The good news is that these issues are usually identifiable and fixable.
A professional technical SEO audit can uncover homepage redirects, detect soft 404 errors, evaluate whether redirects are appropriate, and recommend the correct solution based on Google’s best practices and the specific goals of your website.
In this guide, we’ll explain:
Let’s start with the basics.
Before discussing the SEO implications, it’s important to understand what’s actually happening behind the scenes.
Many website owners know that a page no longer exists, but they don’t always realize how search engines interpret the way that page is handled.
A 404 status code tells browsers and search engines that a requested page cannot be found on the server.
In plain English, it means:
“This page doesn’t exist.”
This status code is a normal part of the web.
Pages get removed all the time. Products go out of stock permanently. Services are discontinued. Blog posts are deleted. Entire website sections are retired.
When this happens, returning a genuine 404 status is often the correct response.
Contrary to popular belief, having some 404 pages on your website does not automatically harm SEO.
Google expects websites to have pages that eventually disappear. What matters is how those pages are handled and whether the response accurately reflects reality.
A homepage redirect occurs when a non-existent URL automatically sends users to the website’s homepage instead of returning a 404 status code.
For example:
Original URL:
example.com/old-product-page
Instead of showing a 404 error, the website redirects visitors to:
example.com
To the user, it may seem harmless.
However, from a search engine perspective, the original page and the homepage often have completely different purposes and content.
That’s where things can become problematic.
In our experience, homepage redirects usually happen for one of four reasons:
Some content management systems and plugins automatically redirect missing pages if they aren’t configured correctly.
Website owners may not even realize it’s happening.
One of the biggest mistakes we see during migration projects is the implementation of blanket redirect rules.
For example:
This approach is fast, but rarely correct.
Developers sometimes add catch-all redirect rules to avoid error pages appearing on the website.
While the intention may be to improve user experience, it often creates soft 404 issues later.
Many businesses believe:
“A redirect is always better than a 404.”
Unfortunately, that’s not true.
A redirect only helps when the destination is relevant to the original page.
Sending every deleted URL to the homepage doesn’t preserve relevance, which is one reason search engines may ignore the redirect altogether.
There are usually good intentions behind homepage redirects.
Business owners worry that visitors will leave if they encounter a 404 page.
Redirecting everyone to the homepage seems like a way to keep users engaged.
Many people view 404 pages as “bad.”
They assume every error page should be eliminated.
In reality, a properly configured 404 page is often the most accurate response.
Another common belief is that redirecting deleted pages transfers all ranking signals to the homepage.
The reality is more complicated.
Google evaluates whether the redirect destination is relevant to the original URL. If the relationship doesn’t make sense, the redirect may not pass value the way website owners expect.
When websites contain thousands of URLs, creating individual redirect mappings can feel overwhelming.
As a result, teams sometimes implement sitewide homepage redirects as a shortcut.
Months later, they discover:
At that point, fixing the issue often requires a detailed technical SEO audit.
This is the question most website owners ask once they discover the issue.
The short answer:
In most cases, yes.
Not because redirects are inherently bad, but because homepage redirects are often irrelevant to the content users and search engines originally requested.
Let’s look at how Google views these situations and why they frequently trigger soft 404 problems.
Google has repeatedly indicated that redirecting unrelated URLs to a generic destination—especially the homepage—is usually not the best solution.
Search engines attempt to understand:
If the destination doesn’t satisfy the same intent as the original page, Google may treat the redirect as ineffective.
For example:
Imagine a user clicks on a search result for:
“Blue Running Shoes Size 10”
Instead of landing on a related product category, they’re redirected to the homepage.
From the user’s perspective, the information they wanted is gone.
From Google’s perspective, the redirect may not provide sufficient relevance to justify indexing or transferring value.
That’s where soft 404 classifications often appear.
A soft 404 occurs when a page appears to exist but effectively behaves as if the content is missing.
This can happen when:
Instead of seeing a proper 404 response, Google sees a page that technically loads but doesn’t satisfy the request.
As a result, Google may classify it as a soft 404.
This distinction is important because many websites believe they’ve solved an issue through redirects when, in reality, search engines still treat the page as missing.
Google doesn’t rely solely on status codes.
It also evaluates:
Let’s say hundreds of deleted product URLs suddenly redirect to the homepage.
Technically, every page loads.
But Google’s systems recognize that the homepage doesn’t replace the missing products.
As a result, those URLs may be flagged as soft 404s rather than valid redirects.
This is especially common on large ecommerce websites after catalog cleanups or platform migrations.
At first glance, a soft 404 may seem less serious than a genuine error page. After all, users still land somewhere on the website.
The reality is different.
Soft 404s create ambiguity. Search engines struggle to determine whether the page should exist, whether the content has been intentionally removed, and whether the redirect destination is actually relevant.
Over time, that uncertainty can affect how efficiently search engines crawl and process your website.
Search engines prefer clear signals.
A proper 404 tells Google:
“This page no longer exists.”
A properly implemented 301 redirect tells Google:
“This page has permanently moved to a relevant replacement.”
A homepage redirect often sends a mixed message.
Google sees a page request for one topic but receives content about something completely different.
That’s why soft 404s frequently appear in Google Search Console even when a redirect is technically in place.
Every website receives a finite amount of crawling attention from search engines.
When Google repeatedly encounters URLs that redirect unnecessarily or lead to soft 404 situations, crawl resources can be spent on pages that provide little value.
This becomes particularly problematic for:
In our experience, websites with extensive redirect problems often have important pages crawled less frequently because search engines spend time processing low-value URL requests.
SEO isn’t only about search engines.
Imagine clicking a search result expecting:
Instead, you arrive at the homepage with no explanation.
Many users assume the content is gone and leave immediately.
That’s where many websites run into trouble.
They believe they’re helping users avoid an error page, but they end up creating confusion instead.
A well-designed 404 page with helpful navigation is often more useful than an irrelevant homepage redirect.
The effects aren’t always immediate.
Many websites continue operating for months before symptoms become visible.
Eventually, however, technical SEO issues tend to surface.
One of the most common problems involves indexing.
Google may decide not to index URLs that appear to be soft 404s.
As a result:
During technical SEO audits, we frequently find websites with hundreds or even thousands of URLs flagged as soft 404s because of homepage redirect rules.
When relevance is lost, rankings often follow.
Let’s say an old service page had earned:
If that page suddenly redirects to the homepage instead of a relevant replacement page, search engines may not transfer value as effectively.
The result can be:
One of the biggest misconceptions is that every redirect passes authority perfectly.
It doesn’t.
Search engines evaluate whether the redirect destination matches the original intent of the page.
For example:
Good Redirect
Old SEO Audit Page → Updated SEO Audit Service Page
Bad Redirect
Old SEO Audit Page → Homepage
The first scenario preserves topical relevance.
The second weakens it.
When hundreds or thousands of deleted URLs continue redirecting unnecessarily, search engines must repeatedly process those requests.
Over time, this creates additional crawl overhead.
Large websites often notice:
The larger the website, the more significant the impact becomes.
Many businesses don’t realize they have a homepage redirect issue until they conduct a technical SEO audit.
Fortunately, there are several warning signs you can look for.
This is the most obvious indicator.
Try entering a URL on your domain that doesn’t exist.
For example:
yourwebsite.com/random-page-that-does-not-exist
If you’re automatically redirected to the homepage instead of seeing a 404 page, there’s a strong chance your site is using a blanket redirect rule.
This doesn’t automatically mean every redirect is wrong, but it’s usually worth investigating further.
Ecommerce websites frequently encounter this problem.
For example:
A discontinued product page gets redirected to:
Instead of:
In many cases, these redirects accumulate over several years and create significant soft 404 issues.
Migration projects are one of the biggest sources of homepage redirects.
We often see situations where:
Initially, everything appears functional.
Several months later:
The redirect strategy becomes the root cause.
Sometimes the issue isn’t intentional.
Certain CMS platforms, plugins, themes, or custom configurations can automatically redirect missing URLs.
Website owners often discover the problem only after reviewing crawl reports.
This is particularly common after:
One of the clearest indicators appears inside Google Search Console.
If you notice:
it’s worth performing a redirect audit immediately.
Search Console is often the first place where these issues become visible.
Traffic declines can occur for many reasons.
However, when drops coincide with:
homepage redirects should be investigated.
In our experience, improperly handled redirects are a surprisingly common cause of post-migration SEO losses.
You don’t necessarily need enterprise-level software to identify homepage redirect problems.
Several tools can reveal whether soft 404 issues exist.
Google Search Console is usually the best starting point.
Navigate to:
Indexing → Pages
Look for reports mentioning:
These sections often reveal patterns associated with redirect problems.
Pay particular attention to URLs that no longer exist but continue receiving crawl activity.
A crawl using Screaming Frog SEO Spider can quickly uncover redirect issues.
During an audit, we typically examine:
The goal is to determine whether deleted pages are being sent to relevant destinations or simply pushed toward the homepage.
For large websites, this process often reveals hundreds of hidden issues within minutes.
Every URL returns an HTTP response.
Common examples include:
| Status Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 200 | Page exists |
| 301 | Permanent redirect |
| 404 | Page not found |
| 410 | Page permanently removed |
When auditing a website, it’s important to verify that deleted URLs return the appropriate response.
A URL that should return a 404 but instead returns a homepage redirect deserves further investigation.
Redirect chains occur when:
URL A → URL B → URL C → Homepage
Each additional step creates inefficiency.
Search engines generally prefer:
URL A → Final Destination
During technical SEO audits, redirect chains often reveal legacy redirect rules that were never cleaned up.
Not all redirects are bad.
The question is whether they’re relevant.
Ask yourself:
Would a user expecting the original page find the destination useful?
If the answer is no, the redirect may be problematic.
For example:
Old CRM Software Guide → Updated CRM Software Guide
Old CRM Software Guide → Homepage
The second example is much more likely to trigger soft 404 concerns.
When businesses discover broken pages on their website, redirecting everything to the homepage often feels like the safest option.
No error page. No dead ends. No apparent issues.
Unfortunately, this approach solves the wrong problem.
Search engines don’t evaluate redirects based solely on whether users land somewhere. They evaluate whether the destination is a meaningful replacement for the original page.
That’s where generic homepage redirects frequently fail.
The purpose of a redirect is to guide users and search engines to the most appropriate alternative.
Think of it this way.
If someone visits a discontinued product page, they are looking for information about that specific product or something closely related.
Sending them to the homepage forces them to start over.
A better solution would be:
The closer the match, the stronger the user experience and the better the SEO outcome.
One issue that often gets overlooked is visitor frustration.
Imagine clicking a Google result for:
“Enterprise SEO Audit Services”
Instead of landing on that service page, you’re redirected to a homepage containing dozens of navigation options.
Most users won’t spend time searching.
They’ll leave.
This creates:
In many cases, a clear 404 page with useful navigation options is actually more helpful than an irrelevant homepage redirect.
Google’s systems have become increasingly sophisticated at understanding page intent.
A redirect is not automatically considered valid simply because it exists.
Search engines evaluate:
If the destination doesn’t adequately replace the original content, Google may classify the URL as a soft 404 regardless of the redirect.
This is one reason why homepage redirects often fail to preserve rankings.
Old URL
/nike-running-shoe-model-a
New URL
/nike-running-shoe-model-b
The products serve a similar purpose and satisfy the same search intent.
This is generally an appropriate 301 redirect.
Old URL
/nike-running-shoe-model-a
Redirects To
/
The homepage doesn’t specifically address the user’s original request.
Google may treat this as a soft 404.
Old URL
/technical-seo-consulting
New URL
/technical-seo-audit-services
The topics are closely related.
Users receive relevant information, and search engines can understand the relationship between the pages.
Fixing homepage redirect problems requires more than simply removing redirects.
The correct solution depends on:
During technical SEO audits, we focus on preserving SEO value while providing clear signals to search engines.
Everything starts with a comprehensive crawl.
We identify:
Without understanding the scope of the issue, it’s impossible to prioritize fixes effectively.
One of the most important steps involves evaluating every significant redirect.
We ask:
This process often reveals hundreds of redirects that should be revised.
Not every deleted page deserves a redirect.
However, pages with:
typically warrant additional attention.
These URLs often benefit from carefully mapped redirects to relevant destinations.
A common issue we encounter is accidental content removal.
For example:
In some cases, restoring the original page is more beneficial than implementing a redirect.
When a replacement page exists, a 301 redirect is usually the best option.
The key is maintaining relevance.
A properly mapped redirect helps:
Sometimes the correct solution is no redirect at all.
If content has been permanently removed and no suitable replacement exists, returning a proper error status often provides the clearest signal.
We’ll discuss this in more detail shortly.
One mistake many websites make is fixing redirects while leaving internal links untouched.
Internal links should point directly to the correct destination.
Otherwise, unnecessary redirects continue occurring throughout the site.
Deleted URLs should not remain in XML sitemaps.
Search engines use sitemaps to discover content.
Including removed pages sends mixed signals.
Part of the recovery process involves ensuring sitemaps accurately reflect current website structure.
After implementation, every fix should be verified.
We typically:
Without validation, technical issues can persist unnoticed.
One of the most common questions during SEO audits is:
“Should this page redirect, or should it return a 404?”
The answer depends on whether a meaningful replacement exists.
If a page has simply changed URLs, use a 301 redirect.
Example:
Old URL:
/seo-audit
New URL:
/technical-seo-audit-services
The content still exists.
Only the URL changed.
Let’s say a product is discontinued.
However, a newer version is available.
Redirecting users to the replacement product often makes sense.
The intent remains largely unchanged.
Website redesigns frequently involve URL changes.
301 redirects help preserve rankings and guide users to the correct locations.
Without them, valuable SEO signals can be lost.
Ecommerce websites commonly replace products with newer models.
In these situations, relevant redirects often provide the best experience for both users and search engines.
Sometimes a redirect is the wrong choice.
If content is gone and no replacement exists, a 404 may be appropriate.
This tells search engines:
“The page no longer exists.”
Simple and clear.
One of the biggest mistakes we see is forcing redirects where no logical destination exists.
In these cases, a proper 404 is usually preferable to an irrelevant redirect.
Many businesses remove:
If these pages no longer serve a purpose, returning a 404 or 410 often makes sense.
Both indicate missing content.
However:
Page not found.
The page may return in the future.
Page permanently removed.
The page is intentionally gone and unlikely to return.
In our experience, either can work effectively when implemented correctly.
The choice often depends on the circumstances surrounding the content removal.
Fixing homepage redirects isn’t about applying blanket rules.
It’s about understanding how each URL contributes to your website’s SEO performance.
Identify redirects, broken pages, status code issues, and crawl anomalies.
Review Search Console data and crawl reports to uncover soft 404 patterns.
Evaluate every significant redirect for relevance and SEO value.
Focus first on pages with:
Create a practical action plan for developers or internal teams.
Verify fixes through testing and ongoing monitoring.
Provide documentation, recommendations, and future optimization opportunities.
When redirect issues are resolved correctly, websites often experience improvements beyond simply reducing errors.
Search engines spend more time crawling important pages.
Important content becomes easier for search engines to process and index.
Visitors reach content that actually matches their expectations.
Improved relevance often supports stronger organic performance over time.
Valuable backlinks can continue contributing to SEO performance.
A well-structured redirect strategy eliminates ambiguity and helps search engines understand website architecture more effectively.
Homepage redirect issues can affect virtually any type of website. While the symptoms may look similar, the underlying causes often differ depending on the business model, website architecture, and content strategy.
Over the years, we’ve audited websites ranging from small local businesses to enterprise platforms with millions of indexed URLs. Here are some of the industries where redirect and soft 404 issues commonly occur.
Ecommerce sites are especially vulnerable because product catalogs change constantly.
Common scenarios include:
A common issue we encounter is product pages being redirected to the homepage after removal. While the intention is usually to avoid broken links, these redirects often trigger soft 404 warnings and fail to preserve the value of existing backlinks.
For ecommerce businesses, proper redirect mapping can have a direct impact on rankings, crawl efficiency, and revenue.
SaaS websites frequently update:
As content evolves, older URLs may be removed or consolidated.
Without a structured redirect strategy, deleted URLs often end up pointing to the homepage or generic product pages, creating indexation and user experience issues.
We often see this after website redesigns or major product repositioning efforts.
Large enterprise websites present unique challenges because they often contain:
Even a small redirect configuration error can affect thousands of URLs simultaneously.
During enterprise SEO audits, homepage redirects frequently emerge as one of the largest sources of crawl waste and soft 404 reports.
Content publishers regularly remove or update articles.
Examples include:
A common mistake is redirecting all removed articles to the homepage.
Instead, search engines generally prefer:
The goal is always to maintain topical relevance.
Local businesses often underestimate technical SEO issues because their websites are smaller.
However, problems still arise when:
We’ve seen local businesses lose valuable rankings simply because service pages were redirected incorrectly after a redesign.
Even smaller websites benefit from a proper redirect strategy.
There are plenty of SEO agencies that can identify a soft 404 report.
The real challenge is understanding why the issue exists, determining its impact, and implementing the correct solution without creating additional SEO problems.
Our approach focuses on root-cause analysis rather than temporary fixes.
We don’t simply look at error reports.
We investigate:
This helps uncover the underlying causes of homepage redirect issues.
Whether your website contains 100 pages or 1 million pages, the principles remain the same.
Our experience includes:
We understand how redirect issues affect different types of businesses.
One-size-fits-all redirect strategies rarely work.
Instead, we create redirect recommendations based on:
The result is a cleaner and more effective redirect structure.
Many soft 404 issues first appear inside Google Search Console.
We use Search Console data alongside crawl analysis to identify:
Technical SEO shouldn’t feel like a black box.
Our audit reports clearly explain:
This helps stakeholders make informed decisions and prioritize implementation.
In most cases, yes.
When the homepage is not a relevant replacement for the original page, search engines may classify the redirect as a soft 404. This can create crawling, indexing, and ranking issues.
A soft 404 occurs when a page appears to exist but provides little or no value relative to the requested URL. Homepage redirects from deleted pages are a common cause.
They can.
Soft 404s may reduce crawl efficiency, weaken relevance signals, and prevent search engines from processing pages correctly.
You can identify them using:
A technical SEO audit provides the most comprehensive assessment.
Use a 301 redirect when a relevant replacement exists.
Use a 404 (or 410) when the content has been permanently removed and no suitable replacement is available.
There is no universal threshold.
However, if important pages are being reported as soft 404s, or if the number continues growing, investigation is recommended.
Yes.
A qualified technical SEO agency can identify redirect problems, create redirect maps, validate status codes, and monitor recovery after implementation.
It depends on crawl frequency and website size.
Many websites begin seeing changes within a few weeks, though larger websites may take longer.
If redirect issues are affecting crawlability, indexation, or rankings, resolving them can contribute to improved organic performance.
Common tools include:
Most professional audits use multiple tools to validate findings.
If your website is redirecting deleted pages to the homepage, it’s worth investigating before the issue affects rankings, crawl efficiency, or user experience.
Many businesses discover homepage redirect problems only after noticing:
The sooner the issue is identified, the easier it is to correct.
✓ Full website crawl and redirect analysis
✓ Soft 404 identification
✓ Homepage redirect review
✓ Redirect mapping recommendations
✓ Crawlability and indexation assessment
✓ Internal linking review
✓ XML sitemap validation
✓ Prioritized action plan based on SEO impact
After the audit, you’ll know:
Whether you’re managing an ecommerce store, SaaS platform, enterprise website, publisher site, or local business website, our technical SEO specialists can help identify and resolve redirect problems before they become larger organic search issues.
Don’t let homepage redirects silently undermine your SEO performance.
Get a professional technical SEO audit to:
Schedule a consultation today and discover exactly how homepage redirects may be impacting your website’s organic visibility.
Digi Arun was founded by Arun Kumar, an SEO specialist in Ashok Nagar, Shahdara, Delhi with a passion for helping businesses grow through ethical and AI driven LLMs search engine optimization.
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