Import Redirects From a CSV File

Manage your redirection preferences with these steps.

Build your CSV file

Import your own redirections from a .csv file (separator , or ;). You must have these columns in this order:

  • URL to match (without your domain name): category/my-blog-post-slug
  • URL to redirect in absolute: https://www.example.org/my-super-article,
  • Type of redirection: 301, 302, 307, 410 or 451,
  • Yes to enable the redirect (leave it empty to disable the redirect)
  • The query parameter:
    exact_match = Exact match with all parameters,
    without_param = Exclude all parameters,
    with_ignored_param = Exclude all parameters and pass them to the redirection,
  • The counter (optional),
  • Category redirect IDs separated by commas (optional): 738,108,134,
  • Yes to enable regular expressions (leave it empty to disable this),
  • And the last parameter, the connection status: both, only_logged_in or only_not_logged_in.

Download a CSV example here.

Import your CSV file

1. Click 'SEO'.

8bcebf49-5e30-4bb8-b7c9-ac716e86c864-1

2. Click 'Tools'.

cc085aed-15a9-4f59-b814-52fde069070f

3. In the 'Redirections' tab, go to 'Import your redirections' section and upload your file.

76fb9a79-e247-459c-a8d0-854673001c29

Duplicated entries from your CSV file will be automatically removed to avoid conflicts.

Go to Redirections section to see your new redirects.

c1fe7e99-bde9-468d-b222-6833997cc02f