The Google Search Console HTTPS report can look more complicated than it is. Once we strip away the labels, it becomes a clean checkup for one question, are our secure pages the ones Google is seeing and indexing?
That matters because HTTPS is about trust first, but it also affects how tidy our site looks to search engines. Search Console labels can shift over time, especially in 2026, so we should focus on the pattern instead of the exact screen wording.
What the HTTPS report is really showing us
At a basic level, the report compares HTTP and HTTPS versions of our indexed pages. It shows how many URLs Google has indexed in each version, then groups the pages that still need attention.
Google’s own HTTPS report help page explains that this is not a complete list of every URL on the site. It is a sample-based report, which is why it feels more like a status check than a full audit. Google also announced the feature in the Search Central blog, and the rollout took place gradually, so older screenshots may look different from what we see now.
Think of it like a building inspection sheet. It does not tell us how every bolt was installed. It tells us where the weak spots are showing up.

The report is a signal, not a verdict. It tells us where Google sees friction, then we work backward to the cause.
One more detail matters here. The report appears for domain properties and HTTPS URL-prefix properties. If we are looking at a property type that does not support it, we may not see the report at all.
How we read the report without getting lost
The easiest way to read the report is to start with the big number, then move into the sample issues. We do not need to understand every line before the report becomes useful.
First, we look at the split between HTTPS and HTTP pages. If the HTTPS count is healthy and the HTTP count is small, that is a good sign. If HTTP pages are still being indexed in meaningful numbers, that tells us the site is still sending mixed signals.
Then we open the issue samples. This is where the report becomes practical. The sample URLs usually point to a pattern, not just one broken page. If we see the same issue across many URLs, we should think about the template, redirect rule, sitemap setting, or internal link pattern behind it.
Next, we compare the sample URLs with our most important pages. A category page, a service page, or a popular post matters more than an old archive page. If the report flags a high-value URL, we move that to the front of the line.
We should also remember that Search Console reports lag behind real-time fixes. We may clean something up today and still see the old signal for a while. That does not mean the fix failed. It usually means Google has not recrawled the page yet.
Why valid HTTPS pages still show problems
This part confuses a lot of site owners. A page can load over HTTPS and still appear in the report. Why? Because the report is not only asking, “Does the page have a secure URL?” It is also asking, “Does the whole page setup agree with that secure version?”
The most common reason is mixed content. The page itself uses HTTPS, but images, scripts, fonts, or styles still load over HTTP. That can create warnings or broken pieces on the page. We cover that in more detail in our guide on fixing HTTPS mixed content warnings.
Another common cause is a certificate problem. If the SSL certificate has expired or was installed incorrectly, Google may see a secure version that is not stable enough to trust. Our article on managing HTTPS certificate renewals for SEO is a good companion read when that is the issue.
Redirects can also cause trouble. If HTTP does not redirect cleanly to one preferred HTTPS version, the site ends up with duplicate paths. Canonical tags can do the same thing if they still point to HTTP. Internal links and sitemap URLs can keep the confusion alive too.
The key idea is simple. One secure URL is not enough. The whole site has to agree on the secure version.
What we fix first, and what can wait
When the report shows multiple problems, we should not chase every sample URL one by one. We should fix the source of the pattern first.
- Lock in one preferred HTTPS version.
We want every HTTP request to land on the secure version with one clean redirect. No redirect chain. No extra hop if we can avoid it. - Remove mixed content.
Old image paths, scripts, stylesheets, and embeds are common culprits. If a page is secure but loads insecure pieces, we fix those assets at the source. - Update canonicals, sitemaps, and internal links.
Once the preferred version is HTTPS, everything else should match it. This makes it easier for Google to understand which URL should be indexed. - Check the certificate and hosting setup.
If we see certificate errors, that gets priority. A broken certificate can make every other fix less useful until it is repaired. - Watch the report after recrawl.
After the fixes are live, we wait for Google to revisit the pages. For important URLs, we can use URL Inspection in Search Console to confirm the live version sooner.
When the same issue appears across a lot of sample pages, the fix is usually site-wide. When only a few old pages show a problem, we may be dealing with legacy content that can be cleaned up in batches.
If we want a simple rule, here it is, fix the thing that affects the most URLs first. That usually gives us the fastest improvement.
Conclusion
The HTTPS report is easier to use once we treat it like a quality check instead of a mystery report. It is showing us where secure pages are not lining up cleanly across redirects, assets, canonicals, and indexing.
That is the real value of the Google Search Console HTTPS report. It helps us spot the loose ends that keep secure pages from becoming the version Google trusts most.
Quick FAQ
Is HTTPS a ranking factor in Google?
Yes, but it is a small one. In 2026, HTTPS still helps, and Google still prefers secure pages when two versions are otherwise similar. It does not outweigh content quality, search intent, links, or user experience.
Why can valid HTTPS pages still show issues?
Because the report looks at more than the page URL. Mixed content, bad redirects, HTTP canonicals, old internal links, and certificate problems can all create issues even when the page itself loads over HTTPS.
How long do fixes take to appear in Search Console?
Usually a few days to a few weeks. It depends on crawl frequency, site size, and how important the page is to Google. URL Inspection can reflect a live fix sooner, but the report itself often waits for recrawl.
Do we need to fix every sample URL one by one?
No. If the same problem repeats across many URLs, we should fix the template, redirect rule, or asset path behind it. That gives us a much cleaner result than patching pages one at a time.




