Post Sitemap
to CSV
Discover XML sitemaps for any website, fetch page titles in batches, and export everything as a clean CSV file.
Find Sitemaps
Enter a website URL to discover its XML sitemaps
Extract & Export
Fetch page titles from a sitemap and download as CSV
What Does the Sitemap to CSV Tool Do?
This tool discovers all XML sitemaps on any website, extracts every URL, fetches the page title for each one, and exports the results as a CSV spreadsheet. It handles nested sitemap indexes (sitemaps that point to other sitemaps), detects CDN bot-blocking, and offers a paste-XML fallback when automated fetching gets blocked.
Page titles are fetched in progressive batches so you can watch results build in real time. The CSV includes the URL, page title, and last modified date for every page in the sitemap.
Who Is This Tool For?
SEO professionals running content audits who need a quick inventory of every indexed page on a site. Web developers checking that all pages are present in the sitemap before a migration. Content strategists mapping out a competitor's site structure. Anyone who needs a spreadsheet of every URL on a website without installing software or creating an account.
Frequently Asked Questions
Enter any website URL into this tool and it discovers all XML sitemaps automatically, including nested sitemap indexes. It extracts every URL with its page title and last modified date, then exports the full list as a downloadable CSV you can open in Excel or Google Sheets. Works with WordPress, Yoast, Rank Math, and all standard sitemap formats.
Before migrating to a new platform or restructuring your site, you need a full list of every existing URL so you can set up 301 redirects. This tool exports all your sitemap URLs and page titles into a CSV. Use that as your redirect mapping spreadsheet, matching old URLs to their new equivalents, so you don't lose search rankings or break bookmarks.
Start by getting a page inventory. This tool discovers your sitemaps and exports every URL with its title to a CSV. From there you can identify thin content, outdated pages, duplicate titles, and gaps in your coverage. Compare the export against your Google Search Console data to find pages that exist but aren't getting traffic.
Yes. It handles all standard XML sitemap formats including WordPress core sitemaps (/wp-sitemap.xml), Yoast SEO sitemaps, Rank Math sitemaps, and All in One SEO sitemaps. It also processes sitemap index files containing links to child sitemaps, such as post-sitemap.xml and page-sitemap.xml.
No hard limit. The tool starts by fetching one page at a time, then automatically ramps up to three at a time as it confirms the server is responding well. Sitemaps with hundreds or thousands of URLs work fine. If it detects rate limiting, it backs off automatically. Larger sitemaps just take a bit longer.
Most websites publish an XML sitemap. Enter any public website URL into this tool and it discovers and parses their sitemaps, giving you a full URL list with page titles as a downloadable CSV. Useful for competitive analysis, understanding a rival's content structure, and identifying topics they cover that you don't.
Yes. The tool only makes read-only GET requests and fetches a small portion of each page. It spaces out requests with adaptive delays, starting cautiously and only ramping up when the server responds well. If it detects rate limiting, it backs off immediately. The user-agent identifies itself as 365iSitemapBot and respects standard web server behaviour.
The CSV contains three columns: URL, Title, and Last Modified. It uses standard comma-separated format with UTF-8 encoding and opens directly in Excel, Google Sheets, or any spreadsheet application. The filename includes the domain name and date for easy organisation.
If a page returns an error or gets rate-limited, the tool generates a readable title from the URL slug instead (for example, /about-our-team/ becomes "About Our Team"). You always get a complete CSV with no blank titles. Every fetch attempt is logged in the Activity Log so you can see exactly what happened.
Yes, and this is one of the most powerful uses. Export your sitemap to CSV, then paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or any AI assistant. Ask it to suggest internal linking opportunities, find content gaps, recommend backlink targets, plan a content strategy, or audit your site structure. The AI can see every page on your site and give specific, actionable advice based on your actual content rather than guessing.
Want to learn how to audit your sitemap and export URLs with page titles? Read the full Sitemap to CSV guide.
Need Fast, Reliable Hosting?
From shared hosting to managed cloud servers, 365i has you covered.