--- title: "On-Page Refresh Cadence for SaaS URLs" description: "Existing pages produce most of a SaaS site's traffic — and decay if untouched. The refresh cadence that preserves ranking, updates outdated facts, and earns re-crawl signals without inviting de-rank." url: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence" verifiedAt: "2026-06-09" canonical: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence" --- # On-Page Refresh Cadence for SaaS URLs > TL;DR — Refresh your top 10 trafficked URLs every 6 months. The pages already ranking 4–15 in Search Console are sitting on the cheapest position lift on the site — a 30-minute refresh that updates the year, adds the entity competitors started using, and republishes is usually worth 3–7 positions and 30–80% more traffic to that URL. In plain English: Refreshing existing SaaS pages on a 3–6 month cadence preserves rankings and unlocks new lift on pages already ranking 4–15. The refresh is small — updated facts, current year, new entities the SERP has adopted — and the work compounds because the refreshed page inherits the original's link equity. ## Key takeaways - Refresh the top 10 trafficked URLs every 6 months — they produce most of the site's traffic. - Pages ranking 4–15 are the highest-ROI refresh targets — small lifts produce traffic doublings. - Update the year in titles and intros (most underrated refresh move). - Re-audit entity coverage against the current top 10 — SERP entity sets drift. - Submit the refreshed URL in Search Console URL Inspection to trigger re-crawl. ## Definition On-page refresh cadence for SaaS is the discipline of revisiting indexed URLs on a 3–6 month schedule to update facts, close entity gaps that emerged since publish, and re-trigger a Search Console re-crawl. ## Why it matters A two-year-old SaaS site has 50–200 indexed marketing pages. Most of them decay quietly: stats go stale, entity sets shift, the year in the title becomes a trust signal in reverse. A small, scheduled refresh on the trafficked pages reverses the decay and unlocks lift the original publishing didn't get — because the page is now competing against a SERP that's two years newer. ## Who refreshes what, when Pull a list of the site's top 50 URLs by Search Console clicks over the trailing 6 months. Sort by current average position. Anything ranked 4–15 with declining position over 30 days is a priority refresh candidate. Build a quarterly schedule: 10–15 URL refreshes per quarter is sustainable for a one-person SEO function. Pillars and pricing get tighter cadence; long-tail posts get longer. ## What a substantive refresh actually changes Update the year in the title and the first paragraph. Re-read the top 10 SERP results and note any new entities, products, or stats that emerged since publish. Add the ones your page should logically cover. Refresh every stat citation: replace 2024 figures with 2026 figures, replace generic claims with current data, fix any broken external links. Update screenshots if the product UI shipped a major redesign. Rewrite the intro if intent has shifted. Check the CTA still matches the page's intent. Republish with the new date — schema's dateModified field should reflect it. ## Triggering re-crawl after a refresh Don't wait for Google to re-discover the URL. Open Search Console URL Inspection, paste the URL, click 'Request indexing'. Re-crawl typically happens within 24–72 hours for actively-managed sites. Cross-link the refreshed page from a higher-traffic existing page for at least 30 days. The fastest re-crawl signal is a new internal link from a page Googlebot already visits often. ## What not to refresh Pages ranking below 50 with no upward trend over 60 days. Refreshing them is rearranging deck chairs — the problem is structural (wrong intent, wrong topic, wrong domain authority for the query) and a 30-minute edit can't fix it. Pages published in the last 90 days. Give them time to find their natural ranking before re-touching. Premature refreshes reset the 'freshness' clock without producing meaningful improvement. Pages that get under 50 visits per month from organic. The opportunity cost is too high — refresh the trafficked pages first; visit the long tail on annual cycles only. ## Quick answers ### How often should I refresh SaaS marketing pages? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence#qa-when) Top 10 trafficked URLs every 6 months. Pillar pages every 4 months. Pricing and product pages every 3 months. Blog posts ranking 4–15 every 4–6 months. Anything ranking below 50 doesn't need a refresh — it needs a rewrite or a delete. ### What does a refresh actually involve? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence#qa-what) Update the year in the title and intro, re-read the top 10 SERP results, add 2–4 entities competitors added since you published, fix any broken external links, refresh stats with the most recent data you can cite, republish, submit to URL Inspection. Total time: 30–60 minutes per URL. ### When is a refresh not enough? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence#qa-rewrite) When the page is ranking below 30 with no upward trend over 60 days, or when the SERP intent has fundamentally shifted (the top 10 used to be guides, now they're product pages). In those cases the page needs a full rewrite or to be merged into a stronger sibling URL. ### Can refreshing too often hurt rankings? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/on-page-refresh-cadence#qa-frequency) Yes — meaningless edits hurt. Changing one paragraph and republishing every 2 weeks teaches Google your 'updates' are noise. Refreshes should be substantive: at least 15% of the body text changed, plus measurable improvements to entity coverage or stats.