If you run a blog for a few months, you’ll start noticing something strange…
Google sometimes picks the wrong version of your page.
It may index a URL with tracking codes.
Or a category URL.
Or an older version of your guide.
This confuses Google and it hurts your rankings.
That’s where the canonical tag becomes your safety switch.
Table of Contents
What Is a Canonical Tag?
A canonical tag tells Google: This is the main page. Treat this as the original version.
If you have multiple similar pages, the canonical tag helps Google understand which URL should get the ranking power.
Think of it like this:
You print the same guide 3 times.
You keep one in a folder labeled “Original File.”
The other two folders are labeled “Copy.”
The canonical tag is that “Original File” label.
It tells Google which version deserves attention, rankings, and link power.
When Do You Need a Canonical Tag?
Most beginners don’t notice they have duplicate URLs. But they happen all the time because of:
- Category or tag pages
- Tracking links (like
?utm_source=youtube) - Printer-friendly versions
- HTTP vs HTTPS
- www vs non-www
- Pagination
- Slightly rewritten versions of the same guide
All these create near-identical URLs that confuse Google.
A canonical tag solves this by pointing everything back to one clean URL.
Simple Example (Easy to Understand)
Main Page
https://thepassivecircle.com/affiliate-marketing-guide
Other versions you shared online
https://thepassivecircle.com/affiliate-marketing-guide?utm_source=youtube
https://thepassivecircle.com/affiliate-marketing-guide?utm_source=email
All these URLs should point back to:
https://thepassivecircle.com/affiliate-marketing-guide
This tells Google: Please count all ranking power toward this main guide.
Your SEO plugin (RankMath, Yoast, SEOpress) usually handles this automatically, but you should still check.
Why Duplicate Pages Happen (Even If You Don’t Try)
These duplicate URLs show up without you doing anything wrong:
- WordPress creates category/tag archives
- Google picks old URLs
- You update a post with a new year
- Shared links add tracking parameters
- Theme settings add extra URL variations
Canonical tags help Google stay focused on one strong URL instead of ten weak ones.
Optimization Tips (Beginner Friendly)
1. Every Important Page Needs a Self-Canonical
This means the canonical URL = the page URL.
Most SEO plugins do this automatically.
2. Pick One Main Version of Each Page
Decide the exact URL you want Google to rank.
That should always be the canonical version.
3. Don’t Change Canonical URLs Often
Once you decide the main link, stick to it.
4. When Merging Two Similar Posts
- Merge content into one strong guide
- Set the weaker page to point to the main one (canonical or redirect)
5. Watch Category and Tag Pages
Most affiliate blogs don’t want tag or category pages ranking.
Set them to noindex or point them to your main post.
Special Advice for Affiliate Blogs
Affiliate blogs often create very similar pages:
Example:
- Best Hosting for Beginners 2024
- Best Hosting for Beginners 2025
You have 2 choices:
Option 1 — Update the old post (best for beginners)
Keep the same URL
Add the new year in the title
Canonical stays clean
Option 2 — Create a new post
Then:
- add a 301 redirect from the old URL
or - set a canonical pointing to the new post
This keeps your content clean and avoids confusing Google.
Also be careful with:
- thin coupon pages
- auto-generated tag pages
- small review snippets with the same info
Too many similar pages = lower rankings.
Canonical tags fix that.
E-E-A-T Angle: How Canonicals Build Trust
Using canonical tags correctly shows Google that you:
✔ Keep a clean site structure
✔ Avoid duplicate content
✔ Focus on your main pillar posts
✔ Want your readers to find the right guide
This helps your authority, trust, and long-term rankings.
Your big guide—like Affiliate Marketing for Beginners—should not compete with its own duplicates.
Canonical tags protect it.
Why Canonical Tags Matter for SEO
1. Avoid Duplicate Content Issues
Google does not want multiple versions of the same page.
2. Focus All Link Power on One Strong URL
If different URLs get backlinks, the canonical tag merges their value.
3. Keep Your Google Index Clean
You want fewer strong pages, not many weak duplicates.
4. You Control What Google Ranks
Not tracking URLs.
Not category pages.
Not old versions.
You decide.
My Simple Canonical Workflow (What I Do on The Passive Circle)
Here’s the exact workflow I follow:
- Check my SEO plugin — ensure every page has a self-canonical.
- Choose the main URL for each important post.
- Avoid creating duplicates — update old content instead.
- If I must keep similar pages, set canonical to the stronger page.
- Search my main keyword on Google sometimes and see which of my URLs show up.
- Fix any wrong ones with canonicals or 301 redirects.
This keeps my site clean, fast, and beginner-friendly.
Quick Checklist Before You Publish
Before hitting Publish, ask yourself:
- Does this page have a canonical tag?
- Is the canonical URL the same as my main URL?
- Do I have similar or older versions of this content?
- Which URL do I want Google to rank?
- Am I sending link power to one strong page?
If your answers are “yes,” your canonical setup is safe.
SEO Structure And Headings Navigation
H1 Tag | H2/H3 Tags | Heading Structure | URL Structure | SEO Friendly URLs | Canonical Tag | Breadcrumb Navigation


