Enter any domain to discover its sitemaps. See how many sitemaps exist, how many URLs they contain, and preview the contents — all for free.
A sitemap is an XML file that lists all the important URLs on a website. It helps search engines like Google, Bing, and Yandex discover and crawl your pages more efficiently. Sitemaps can include metadata such as when a page was last updated, how often it changes, and its relative priority.
Most websites publish their sitemap at /sitemap.xml or reference it in their robots.txt file. Our sitemap finder checks both locations plus common sitemap paths to find every sitemap on a domain.
We parse the website's robots.txt file for any Sitemap: directives.
We check common sitemap locations like /sitemap.xml, /sitemap_index.xml, and more.
We parse the first discovered sitemap and show you a sample of its URLs with last-modified dates.
Yes. You can use the sitemap finder up to 3 times per hour without creating an account. For unlimited access and full URL extraction, sign up for a free API key.
Not all websites publish sitemaps. If none are found, the website may not have one, or it may be at a non-standard location that our tool doesn't check.
Yes. SitemapKit offers a REST API for sitemap discovery and extraction. Sign up for a free API key to access the /v1/sitemap/discover and /v1/sitemap/extract endpoints.
The free tool shows up to 5 sample URLs. With an API key, you can extract up to 50,000 URLs per sitemap.
Need full sitemap data?
Get a free API key to extract all URLs from any sitemap. 100 requests/month included.