SpeedyIndex vs Omega Indexer: Which to Pick in 2026

Both are backlink indexers: they push URLs you do not own into Google using methods neither company discloses. The real differences are billing and track record. SpeedyIndex sells pay-per-result token packs from $5, but it already went dark once. Omega Indexer sells monthly credit plans from $60/mo, and recent user reports on its results are mixed. Here is the honest breakdown, plus a third option if the pages you care about are on your own site.

Quick Verdict

Choose SpeedyIndex if

  • You index backlinks in bulk and want the lowest list price per URL.
  • You prefer pay-per-result billing: tokens for unindexed links come back after 7 days.
  • You want no subscription. Tokens never expire, top up when needed.
  • You accept the risk of a service that shut down once already.

Choose Omega Indexer if

  • You run recurring campaigns and want a dashboard with drip-feed control.
  • You want an HTTP API or the hosted MCP server for AI-agent workflows.
  • You prefer a predictable monthly credit budget at agency volume.
  • You are fine paying more per URL for an actively developed service.

Consider IndexMachine if

  • The pages you need indexed are on sites you own and verify.
  • You want the official Search Console and Bing APIs, not a black box.
  • You want autopilot: daily sitemap monitoring, auto re-submits, 404 alerts.
  • You would rather pay once ($12.50 lifetime) than per URL, forever.
FeatureSpeedyIndexOmega IndexerIndexMachine
Pricing modelPay-per-result token packsMonthly credit plansLifetime, from $12.50 once
Cost per URLAbout $0.03 to $0.10 per indexed link$0.10 to $0.15 per credit (1 credit = 1 URL)No per-URL fees
Billing cadenceOne-time top-ups, tokens never expireCredits reset every monthPay once (or $9.50/mo)
Indexing methodUndisclosed (not the official API)Proprietary, undisclosedOfficial GSC + Bing APIs
Works on URLs you do not ownYesYesNo, your own verified sites
Bing indexingIndex check onlyNo, Google onlyYes
ChatGPT / LLM indexingNot offeredNot offeredYes
AutomationManual uploads, drip-feed modeManual campaigns, drip-feed, API, MCPFull autopilot, daily
Track recordWent dark Nov 2025, relaunched 2026Running (V2), mixed user reportsOfficial APIs, nothing to break

SpeedyIndex vs Omega Indexer Pricing

The two services bill in opposite ways. SpeedyIndex sells one-time token packs (as of mid 2026: $5, $20, $50, $100, $250, and $500) where one indexed link costs 100 tokens, tokens never expire, and tokens for links that do not index are returned after the 7-day report. That works out to roughly $0.03 to $0.10 per indexed link depending on the pack. Note that this is several times higher than before its shutdown: its own September 2025 benchmark advertised $30 per 5,000 links, about $0.006 each.

Omega Indexer sells monthly credit plans where 1 credit submits 1 URL: Basic $60/mo (400 credits), Pro $130/mo (1,000), Silver $288/mo (2,400), Gold $600/mo (6,000), Platinum $1,000/mo (10,000), and Agency $2,000/mo (20,000). That is $0.10 to $0.15 per credit, credits reset each month, and its old pay-as-you-go rate near $0.02 per link is gone. Credits are returned for non-indexable URLs and for URLs not indexed within 9 days.

On list price, SpeedyIndex is cheaper per URL at every volume. Charles Floate's hands-on Omega Indexer review made the same point in sharper terms, putting Omega Indexer at roughly 30 to 40 times SpeedyIndex's cost per URL at the prices he compared. Both vendors change pricing often, so treat every number here as a mid 2026 snapshot.

What you paySpeedyIndexOmega IndexerIndexMachine
Entry price$5 pack (about 50 indexed links)$60/mo (400 credits)$12.50 once (1 site, 1,000 pages)
Cost after 1 yearWhatever tokens you buy, no recurring fee$720 (Basic) to $24,000 (Agency)Still $12.50 total
10,000 URLsRoughly $300 to $1,000 in tokens$1,000 (one month of Platinum)Covered by the $84.50 tier (own sites)
Lifetime optionNoNoYes: $12.50, $50, or $84.50
Free tier100 free tokens (about 1 indexed link)None publishedFree tools (index checker and more)

The IndexMachine column only applies to sites you own: it submits through your own Search Console, so it cannot index other people's URLs. Within that lane, one payment replaces the per-URL meter entirely. Every tier is on the IndexMachine pricing page.

How SpeedyIndex Works

You upload a list of URLs, SpeedyIndex does something it does not fully disclose (it describes the method as sending signals to the real Google infrastructure so a mobile Googlebot crawls your links), and you pay only for links that end up indexed. No Search Console access is needed, which is exactly why link builders use it: it works on any URL on any site. It also offers a REST API, a drip-feed mode, and a backlink checker.

The history matters, though. In November 2025 SpeedyIndex announced a suspension of operations, pointing at changes on Google's side. It came back for a few hours, went dark again, and turned off its Telegram support channels. By January 2026 the BlackHatWorld community had largely concluded it was gone for good, and one user reported losing a deposit made right before the shutdown. It relaunched in early 2026, dropped its pay-per-submit mode (in March 2026, per a May 2026 competitor roundup), and now runs pay-per-result only at a higher effective price than before.

The takeaway is not that SpeedyIndex is a scam. It is that an undisclosed method can break overnight, and it already did once. Our full SpeedyIndex review covers the shutdown timeline and the relaunch pricing in detail.

How Omega Indexer Works

You create a campaign in the dashboard, paste your URLs, optionally drip-feed them, and spend one credit per URL. The mechanism is proprietary and undisclosed; the site currently describes a Google Search Console based method that takes 7 to 8 days, with links ready within 9 days. It covers Google only, no Bing. On the tooling side it is ahead of SpeedyIndex: a documented HTTP API and even a hosted MCP server, so AI agents like Claude Code can submit campaigns directly. Credits come back automatically for URLs that are non-indexable or not indexed within 9 days.

The caution flags are about results, and they are third-party reports rather than anything we tested ourselves. Back in January 2023, a detailed BlackHatWorld thread documented spam domains creating temporary links to submitted URLs, with spam links showing up in Search Console. Charles Floate's hands-on review measured a success rate of around 25%, down from earlier years. And more recently, users in a BlackHatWorld thread comparing indexers have reported that Omega does not work for them anymore. Those are user reports, not measurements, and Omega's auto-return of credits limits the direct cost of a failed batch. But they are worth weighing before you commit to a $600/mo tier.

For the full picture, including what its V2 relaunch changed, see our Omega Indexer review.

Where IndexMachine Fits (and Where It Does Not)

IndexMachine is not a third backlink indexer. It cannot index URLs you do not own, because it works through your own verified Search Console property. If your job is forcing indexation on tier-2 links, stick with the two tools above.

But a lot of people comparing SpeedyIndex and Omega Indexer are actually trying to get their own pages indexed, and for that job both tools are the long way around: per-URL fees and undisclosed third-party signals pointed at a site you care about. IndexMachine submits through the official Google Search Console Indexing API and Bing Webmaster Tools with your own OAuth credentials, pings ChatGPT's crawlers, monitors your sitemap daily, re-submits pages that drop out, and alerts you on 404s. There are no tokens and no credits: lifetime plans are $12.50 (1 site), $50 (5 sites), and $84.50 (10 sites, 10,000 pages each), with a $9.50/mo subscription if you prefer. Details on the pricing page.

Nothing about the method is hidden, so there is no loophole to lose. That is the trade: less reach (your own sites only), more predictability.

The Honest Verdict

For bulk backlink indexing on a budget, SpeedyIndex wins on price: roughly $0.03 to $0.10 per indexed link, pay-per-result, no subscription. The catch is trust. It went dark in November 2025, relaunched months later at several times its old effective price, and its method is a black box. Buy small packs, not big balances.

Omega Indexer is the more actively developed product, with campaign tooling, an API, an MCP server, and credits returned automatically when links do not index within 9 days. It costs more per URL ($0.10 to $0.15, on plans that reset monthly), covers Google only, and independent reports on its results range from a measured 25% success rate to forum users saying it no longer works for them. Test a small tier before scaling.

And if the URLs you keep submitting are on your own sites, step out of the backlink-indexer aisle entirely. The official Search Console route is free of per-URL fees and cannot be shut down by a Google-side change, and IndexMachine automates it for $12.50 once.

Indexing Your Own Site? Skip the Per-URL Meter.

IndexMachine runs your indexing on the official Google and Bing APIs, on autopilot, for a single payment. No tokens, no monthly credits.

Frequently Asked Questions