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Come disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress

Avete mai fatto clic su un’immagine in WordPress, per poi ritrovarvi con un’immagine solitaria su una pagina vuota? Si tratta di una pagina dell’allegato e non è certo uno spettacolo accogliente per i vostri visitatori.

Queste pagine predefinite dell’allegato spesso non sono contestualizzate, offrendo un’esperienza utente scadente e danneggiando la SEO. La buona notizia è che potete facilmente disabilitare queste pagine, come facciamo su WPBeginner.

Si può anche creare un’esperienza di navigazione più fluida reindirizzando i visitatori a una destinazione più pertinente, come il blog in cui compare l’immagine.

In questo articolo vi mostreremo come disabilitare le pagine dell’allegato in WordPress e reindirizzarle alla pagina genitrice, trasformando quelle pagine di immagini senza uscita in opportunità di engagement.

How to Disable Image Attachment Pages in WordPress

Perché si dovrebbero disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress?

Per impostazione predefinita, WordPress crea una singola pagina per ogni allegato multimediale presente sul sito. Ciò include immagini, file audio e video, PDF e altro ancora.

Alcuni utenti potrebbero trovare utile questa funzionalità, ma la maggior parte dei siti web WordPress non ne ha bisogno.

Ad esempio, i fotografi possono trovare utili le pagine degli allegati. Un tema fotografico potrebbe utilizzare la pagina degli allegati per visualizzare i dati EXIF. In questo modo si potrebbe mostrare il modello di fotocamera utilizzato, le impostazioni della fotocamera e persino i dati relativi alla posizione dell’immagine.

Molti proprietari di blog WordPress collegano accidentalmente le loro immagini alle pagine degli allegati invece che all’immagine stessa, oppure non amano l’aspetto che assumono perché molti temi non hanno modelli speciali per le pagine degli allegati alle immagini.

A volte, un’immagine sul vostro sito web può diventare popolare e le persone possono iniziare ad atterrare sulla pagina dell’allegato direttamente da Google. L’ideale è che i visitatori arrivino sul vostro post e vedano l’immagine nel contesto in cui l’avete utilizzata.

Per risolvere questo problema, vi mostreremo due modi diversi per disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress, in modo che possiate scegliere il migliore per voi:

Metodo 1: Disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress (con un plugin)

Il modo più semplice per disabilitare le pagine degli allegati di immagini è utilizzare All in One SEO (AIOSEO). È il miglior plugin SEO per WordPress, utilizzato da oltre 3 milioni di siti.

La prima cosa da fare è installare e attivare il plugin gratuito All in One SEO. Per farlo, consultate la nostra guida su come installare un plugin di WordPress.

Una volta installato e attivato il plugin, avrete una nuova voce di menu chiamata “All in One SEO”.

Andare su All in One SEO ” Aspetto della ricerca. Quindi, fare clic sulla scheda di navigazione “Image SEO”.

All in One SEO search appearance media setting

La prima impostazione è “Reindirizza URL allegati”. È possibile disattivare completamente l’impostazione o reindirizzare alla pagina dell’allegato o alla pagina madre dell’allegato.

Si consiglia di reindirizzare alla pagina ‘Attachment Parent’. In questo modo, quando un utente arriva sulla pagina dell’allegato, viene reindirizzato al vostro articolo.

Nota: se un media o un’immagine non hanno una pagina madre, cioè non sono stati caricati in un post o in una pagina, AIOSEO visualizzerà la pagina dell’allegato dell’immagine.

Una volta selezionata l’impostazione preferita, è sufficiente fare clic su “Salva modifiche” prima di uscire dalla schermata.

Metodo 2: Disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress (con uno snippet di codice)

Un’altra opzione è quella di aggiungere uno snippet di codice a WordPress. Non consigliamo di modificare direttamente i file di WordPress, quindi per questa esercitazione utilizzeremo WPCode.

Per iniziare, è necessario installare il plugin gratuito WPCode. Per maggiori dettagli, consultate la nostra guida su come installare un plugin di WordPress.

Dopo l’attivazione, è necessario andare su Code Snippets ” Add Snippet nella dashboard di amministrazione.

Quindi, digitate semplicemente “attachment” nel campo di ricerca. Sulla destra dovrebbe apparire uno snippet intitolato “Disabilita le pagine degli allegati”.

Quando ci si passa sopra, fare clic sul pulsante “Usa snippet”.

Using WPCode search to remove attachment pages

Si accede alla pagina “Edit Snippet”, dove tutte le impostazioni vengono impostate automaticamente.

È sufficiente spostare l’interruttore su “Attivo” e fare clic sul pulsante “Aggiorna”.

Clicking the toggle to activate a code snippet in WPCode before hitting update

Ora, quando un utente arriva sulla pagina dell’allegato dell’immagine, viene reindirizzato al post padre. Se non esiste un post padre per l’immagine, l’utente sarà reindirizzato alla homepage del sito.

Speriamo che questo articolo vi abbia aiutato a disabilitare le pagine con allegati di immagini in WordPress. Potreste anche consultare la nostra guida per principianti sul SEO delle immagini e la nostra guida su come risolvere i problemi più comuni relativi alle immagini in WordPress.

Se questo articolo vi è piaciuto, iscrivetevi al nostro canale YouTube per le esercitazioni video su WordPress. Potete trovarci anche su Twitter e Facebook.

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Editorial Staff at WPBeginner is a team of WordPress experts led by Syed Balkhi with over 16 years of experience in WordPress, Web Hosting, eCommerce, SEO, and Marketing. Started in 2009, WPBeginner is now the largest free WordPress resource site in the industry and is often referred to as the Wikipedia for WordPress.

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Reader Interactions

72 commentiLascia una risposta

  1. SHUBHAM GARG

    Why don’t you update this article ?

    Yoast doesn’t have this feature in free version anymore.

    • WPBeginner Support

      We are updating our articles as fast as we are able. For the moment you may want to check under Search Appearance > Media

      Admin

    • Dave

      My Yoast SEO does have this option under MEDIA. It is the first option, and it says Yoast suggests YES to “Redirect attachment URLs to the attachment itself?”
      March 2021 is when I checked.

  2. Abhishek

    i post images and link them to media file on my site
    should i disable the attachment media pages?
    if i do, will it affect seo?

    • WPBeginner Support

      That would depend on your personal preference and if the main content of your site is images rather than posts and pages.

      Admin

  3. Tommy

    Thank you! For some reason I have never experienced this issue using yoast until today! One of my sites kept redirecting to the image instead of my attachment page. Wasted an hour trying to figure out if it was a function issue I had created. Turns out it was the Yoast plugin. Easy fix thank yoU!

  4. Esther Roche

    Hi
    Yoast has now changed all the settings, they keep doing this and honestly they’re driving people mad.
    This “Redirect attachment URL to parent post” was very handy and understandable, but now it doesn’t exist.
    Instead, we have a Media tab where the instructions seem, at least for me, a bit unclear. This is the explanation they give:

    When you upload media to WordPress, it doesn’t just save the media, it creates an attachment URL for it. These attachment pages are quite empty: they contain the media item and maybe a title if you entered one. Because of that, if you never use these attachment URLs, it’s better to disable them, and redirect them to the media item itself.

    What this seems to provoke is that now Google is showing image attachment URLs in the SERPs results. But there is no option, as before, to redirect the attachment URL to the parent post. What do we do then?

    Am I not understanding correctly the use of the new Media tab? What should I do so that Google doesn’t show those attachments as results in the SERPs that are not image search? Am I not understanding correctly the use of the new Media tab? What should I do so that Google doesn’t show those attachments as results in the SERPs that are not image search? What is it that I’m getting wrong?

    H E L P!!

    • Sevda

      Hi Esther,
      The current function in Yoast removes the attachment urls by redirecting them to the direct url of the media file (instead of to the parent post). If you are turning it on just now, it’s normal to still have attachment page urls in the index. Selecting the option would lead to the attachment urls eventually disappearing from search engines’ indexes and being replaced by the media files’ direct urls (blabla.jpg for example).
      If you want to speed up the removal of the attachment urls, you can do so in Google Search Console.

  5. Max Dai

    This post needs an update because Yoast has made a lot of changes to its features on new update.

    • Amanda Formaro

      I agree. Not only did Yoast update, but they also removed the very option you are recommending in this post (unfortunately). And now all that’s left is to redirect to the actual attachment. :(

  6. Colin

    The link is out of date now as the permalinks can be found under Advanced on the latest version.

    Thanks anyway as I have just updated it.

  7. Jeff

    So if we aren’t linking to these attachment pages, is there really any reason to redirect these so google doesn’t index them? The reason I ask is for videos directly uploaded, we have the transcript in the description field so google indexes that.

    If we redirect would it still index that transcript or should I leave as is?

  8. beginner

    i was using all in one seo plugin and i found “Redirect Attachments to Post Parent:” in my seo General settings, and i mark it.

    So, is that same and worked?

  9. javidan

    hi
    witch one is better for SEO
    nofollow no index or disable ?
    thank you

  10. Pedro

    Thank you SO much! This simple thing helped me a lot. :)

  11. Michael Peters

    Question: How can I keep WP from creating an attachment in the database?
    What I mean is that I have roughly 40k actual posts, and over 100k rows in the wp_posts table. After running a query, it seems that there is ~100k posts with post_type “attachment.” Are all of these rows necessary?

  12. Mem

    Thanks exactly what I was looking for. I use yoastSEO so it was a single click.

  13. Ben

    Or You can write this line on robots.txt

    Disallow: /wp-content/uploads/

  14. Ajit

    Thank you, yes I done, very helpful topics, thank you again

  15. Laurence Cope

    But how do you actually disable attachment pages? This post doesn’t disable them but puts a redirect in place. We have issues where the redirects is conflicting with actual page names. We dont want any attachment pages and therefore no need for redirects.

  16. paul

    I would like to keep the attachment pages but within the attachment pages that display the image in a bigger size to disable links to prev next and full size image as this is where they can copy images or see images that I dont want non registered users to see etc. How can we do that?

  17. Whitney

    Oh wait, I just realized something… if I no index the media files, does that mean all my media is not indexed or just the attachment pages?

  18. Whitney

    Is the duplicate content issue only solved if I “no index” the pages or will the 301 redirect to parent take care of that too? I’m assuming I’d need to no index them…. but just want to make sure I’m assuming right :)

  19. Muhammad Furqan

    Hello i also disabled attachments pages in sitemap. will this technique prevents google to index images?

  20. Sophia Martin

    Thanks for the quick help, it fixed things at once!

    Thanks again!

  21. marco

    Great solution!
    May I add that after the modification on Yoast I had to go to Settings->Permalinks and save settings (no need to change anything).
    Your mileage may vary, this worked for me, thanks!

  22. Stef

    It seems Yoast has changed things and this no longer works. Or something is stuck in cache.

    • Jodi

      I’m having the same issue and I don’t think it’s the cache. I installed the plugin mentioned and that works fine.

    • Adrian Thompson

      I had to go to Settings > Permalinks and click Save Changes (without making any changes) in order for it to work after the Yoast setting change.

      Hope it works for you.

  23. Hicham

    Hi,

    Please how to create image.php ?

    Thank you

  24. Henry

    A nice informative article but oh my what a misleading title!
    The post title and the last sentence (after the comma) of the first paragraph are totally off!!!

    This is NOT disabling attachment pages/nor stopping WP from creating them (as the title implies) but redirecting links to it to somewhere else, and that is something real different!

    Disabling is stopping some from to be happen, and whatever code is shown in this article (even used by named plugins) it is not stopping WP from creating these attachment pages. This article is about how to redirect , which is okay ofcourse but not as implied by the post title and article as it. Such a shame because that would be a scoop!

    • Jesse

      Henry has pointed out an important distinction.

      I am building a site that requires members to upload sensitive/private information via registration form. We absolutely can not have these files accessible to the public and need minimize any chance that these files will be indexed and publicly visible. Preventing the creation of attachment pages would seem the way to go, but I supposed redirects would work as well. We wouldn’t want to outright disable all attachment pages as we do want some uploaded files to be indexed, however, as WP Beginner Support pointed out, these files can still be indexed if they are contained within other posts.

      Think I will try enabling the attachment page redirects via Yoast SEO plugin as well as change the default directory where registration form uploads are stored (ie. will no longer be in default ‘/uploads’ directory) and disable indexing of that directory via robots.txt.

      Thoughts?

  25. Angela

    Hi, thanks for the info!

    What about older images which were previously indexed by Google?

    I have had the setting on in Yoast for “redirect attachments” for at least 6 months now, but my older images are still being found.

    What would anyone recommend to do with these images? It concerns me because I get some critical errors on the ahrefs tool:

    duplicate title tags
    duplicate meta descriptions

    Shall I just go and add all the tags?

  26. Simon G.Proudfoot

    Putting the line in my image.php file worked perfectly. It was giving me a bad SEO score beforehand as the links to the images weren’t mobile friendly. This has fixed it. Thanks :)

  27. Priyanka Biswas

    Glad I found this article. Was wondering why Google was showing all my image attachment pages in the search results. This helps! Thank you.

  28. Raleigh Leslie

    Thanks this post helped me explain to someone why you would want to redirect media attachment pages to the actual post of page containing to media. re: “Sometimes an image on your website can become popular and people might start landing on the attachment page directly from Google. Ideally you would want them to land on your post and see the image in the context you have used it.”

    Word!

  29. sam

    mine is already checked but doesn’t work, all my images redirected to an other page :(

  30. Catherine

    Thank you so much for helping me solve the problem of image attachments. I inserted the code

    post_parent)); ?>
    into my image.php file and it worked like a charm.
    So will Google now de-index my attachment page url’s?

  31. Chris Cox

    Ok. Using the php code (no plugin) what happens if there are two pages/posts using the same image?

  32. ashar

    I just checked the redirect in SEO as these things were driving me nuts. so glad I found you. thanks – best ashar

  33. Tonya

    Thank you! This was an excellent tip, just what I needed to help clean up errors found by Google.

  34. Jorge Pinto

    I tryed the code you suggest, it works with the images associated with posts os pages, but.. all the other images uploaded that are no assigned to any post, for that images your code does not work.

    • Ogier Schelvis

      I also had this issue. The Yoast! setting seemed to be ignored. Whether or not it was cache, I like the fact about the image.php solution that you have more freedom to determine what is going to happen. I just wanted to show a 404 for example if the post parent was not set. I solved it like this:

      if($post->post_parent != 0):
      wp_redirect(get_permalink($post->post_parent));
      else:
      $wp_query->set_404();
      status_header(404);
      nocache_headers();
      include( get_query_template( ‘404’ ) );
      endif;

  35. philip

    Hello a user called Sam posted this issue – You write “Simply check the noindex, nofollow tag for ONLY the attachment post type.” but I do not see such an option. Are you referring to the “media” section? If I click no index under media will that no index my images or attachments? I would like to no index my attachments but I don’t want to lose traffic from Google images.

    I would also like to know the answer as I have the same issue
    thanks
    philip

    • WPBeginner Support

      Philip, no this should not affect your Google Image Search traffic as the option redirects users landing on attachment page to the parent post URL where your image is available for search engines to index.

      Admin

  36. Jess

    Is it ok to delete the attachment posts in phpMyAdmin?

  37. karen

    I tried adding the code you have given to my image.php file and it worked beautifully. thank you!

  38. Sam

    You write “Simply check the noindex, nofollow tag for ONLY the attachment post type.” but I do not see such an option. Are you referring to the “media” section? If I click no index under media will that no index my images or attachments? I would like to no index my attachments but I don’t want to lose traffic from Google images.

  39. Elektra

    thanks so much for posting! very useful info and straight forward! appreciated!!

  40. Mark Law

    Thanks for the heads up, I got a bit of a shock when I saw absolutely everything had been indexed, including elements of the template such as image backgrounds and so on. I’m using Yoast so it is an easy fix – I wonder though if it is worth still having pdf attachment pages indexed – I’ll look into it.

  41. Junaid Abbas

    Is this possible to stop attachment pages to be indexed??? I do not want to redirect them to the home page. I just want to stop indexing them.

  42. Mark

    I love the Internet, within 2 mins of discovering an issue, I had found this post and resolved the problem! Thank you wpbeginner.com

  43. Shannon

    Will this also fix the issue with creating duplicated content where the image holds the same title as the associated post?

  44. Bruce Simmons

    Heads up about the plugin… if you use the gallery option to present images in a post, the plugin blocks the function and clicking on an image brings the user back the thumbs index of the images.
    -Bruce

  45. Sharon Rigano

    Thank you for this article. It has come just at the right time as I was trying to work this one out. Turns out it is a simple solution.

  46. yogesh

    Thanks! This is a very useful tutorial.

  47. Ahmad Raza

    Thanks for the tutorial. I became victim of Google Panda just because of indexing of alot of attachment pages from my photo blog.
    Is there any way to no index only attachment pages (not images) from Google?
    Because i have a photo blog and i don’t want to redirect my photos to main posts.

    • Alex

      Ahmad Raza, here’s soulution for you

      1 || is_author() || is_tag() || is_date() || is_attachment()){
      echo ”;
      } ?>

      You can add just this:

      <?php if( is_attachment()){
      echo '’;
      } ?>

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