Until recently, Instagram SEO and Google SEO were two completely different games. You optimised your website for Google and your captions for the Instagram algorithm. Then in July 2025, that changed. Google and Bing started indexing public Instagram posts from business and creator accounts — meaning your Reels, carousels, and feed posts can now appear on page one of Google search results alongside traditional websites. Most creators are still posting as if nothing changed. Here is how to be one of the few who actually takes advantage of it.
The July 2025 update quietly reshaped how content discovery works.
For the first time, Instagram is no longer a closed ecosystem. Your content is no longer limited to followers, hashtags, or the Explore page. It is now part of the broader search internet.
When Google indexes your Instagram content, it reads and stores information from your posts — captions, alt text, and even contextual signals from visuals.
That means:
Your Instagram post can show up in Google search results
Users can discover your content without ever opening Instagram
One post now has two discovery engines working for it
This is a fundamental shift from social-first visibility to search-driven discovery.
Not every account qualifies.
To be indexed:
Your account must be public
It must be a business or creator account
You must be 18+
Content from January 2020 onward is eligible
If you meet these criteria, your content is already being scanned whether you optimise it or not.
A skincare brand like Rhode managed to rank Instagram content on Google for a niche query like “glazing mist tricks.”
What’s surprising is not just that it ranked it ranked above traditional websites, including unrelated industries.
This proves one thing clearly:
Google is actively prioritising relevant Instagram content when it matches search intent.
Because they are still thinking in old systems:
Writing short, vague captions
Ignoring alt text
Using generic hashtags
Creating content only for the Instagram feed
They are optimising for engagement, not discoverability.
And that is exactly why this opportunity still exists.
To rank on both platforms, you need to understand how each one evaluates content.
They are different systems but they overlap more than most people realise.
Instagram relies heavily on contextual signals:
Keywords in your username and bio
Caption text
Hashtags
Alt text
Engagement (likes, saves, shares)
Recency and activity
Instagram is essentially trying to answer:
“Is this content relevant and engaging for this topic?”
Google’s approach is more structured.
It looks at:
Keyword relevance in captions
Alt text descriptions
Search intent match
Content clarity
Account credibility and consistency
Instagram is essentially trying to answer:
“Does this post answer a specific search query better than other results?”
Both Instagram and Google prioritise:
Clear, specific keywords
Descriptive language
Relevant context
Meaningful engagement
Which means one thing:
You don’t need two separate strategies — you need a smarter single one.
If you only optimise for Instagram:
→ You miss out on search traffic from Google
If you only think about Google:
→ You lose engagement signals from Instagram
The real advantage comes from combining both.
This is where most creators get it wrong.
Ranking isn’t about one trick it’s about optimising multiple small elements that work together.
Before:
“loving this look today”
After:
“Five ways to style vintage band tees for work without looking casual”
Your caption is the strongest SEO signal.
It should:
Include keywords naturally
Be specific and descriptive
Answer a real question or intent
Think of it as a micro-article, not a casual update.
Alt text is one of the most underused features on Instagram.
Found under Advanced Settings, it allows you to describe your image in detail.
Why it matters:
Instagram reads it for context
Google uses it for indexing
It strengthens keyword clarity
Example:
Instead of leaving it blank, write:
“woman styling vintage band tee with blazer for office outfit”
Simple. Powerful. Almost no one is doing it properly.
Hashtags are no longer about going viral.
They are about categorisation.
Best practice:
Use 5–10 highly relevant hashtags
Keep them specific to your topic
Avoid spammy or generic tags
Bad: #explorepage #viral
Good: #vintagefashiontips #workwearstyleideas
This helps both platforms understand what your content is about.
Reels are not just visual content anymore.
Text inside your video matters.
Optimise by:
Adding a keyword-rich title on screen
Using subtitles for spoken content
Matching text with what users would search
Example:
“How to style oversized shirts for summer”
This creates additional indexable content for both Instagram and Google.
If your content has any local relevance, always tag a location.
Why it works:
Helps Instagram categorise geographically
Allows Google to connect your content with local searches
For example:
A café post tagged in Manchester can appear in searches like:
“best coffee shops in Manchester”
Local visibility is one of the easiest wins most businesses ignore.
This is the most important and most ignored factor.
Every search falls into one of three categories:
Informational (how to…)
Navigational (brand-specific)
Transactional (buy/book)
Your content must clearly match one.
If your caption is vague, Google cannot classify it — and it will not rank.
Clarity of intent = visibility.
Not all content performs equally in search environments.
These formats consistently perform better:
Highly searchable and directly aligned with informational intent.
Great for transactional and decision-based queries.
Perfect for local SEO and discovery.
Clear, structured, and keyword-rich.
Posts that stay relevant over time outperform trend-based content in search.
Use this before publishing anything:
Caption: Does it include a clear keyword and answer a question?
Alt Text: Is it filled with descriptive, relevant language?
Hashtags: Are they specific and accurate?
Reels: Does it include text and subtitles?
Location: Is it tagged if relevant?
Intent: Is the purpose of the post obvious?
If you can check all six, your post is optimised for both platforms.
This is where most strategies stop but this is where leverage increases.
Embedding your Instagram feed on your website connects your social content to your domain.
Visitors spend more time interacting with dynamic content.
Higher dwell time signals to Google that:
Your site is engaging
Your content is valuable
This improves overall SEO performance.
When your website has authority, and it features your Instagram content:
Google associates both
Your content gains stronger credibility signals
This creates a feedback loop between platforms.
Dumping your entire feed is not effective.
Instead:
Highlight high-quality posts
Align with your website content
Keep it relevant to user intent
Curation improves both UX and SEO.
Instaplug simplifies the entire process.
Instead of manually embedding or updating feeds, it:
Integrates your Instagram seamlessly
Keeps your content fresh
Aligns your social and website strategy
This turns your Instagram into an active SEO asset not just a social channel.
Instagram and Google are no longer separate channels that require separate strategies.
Every post you publish today has the potential to rank in two places:
Inside Instagram
On Google search results
The creators who understand this shift are already gaining:
More visibility
More traffic
More leverage from the same content
And the best part?
Most people still haven’t adjusted.
If you start now optimising captions, using alt text, aligning with search intent, and connecting your content to your website you are not just posting content.
You are building a dual search presence.
And in 2026, that is one of the most powerful advantages you can have.