After installing our AMP plugin then you will find this option in the WordPress Dashboard from which you can select the option where you want to show AMP by following this -> AMP option panel -> Settings -> General -> On which option you want AMP support just enable those option and then click on the “Save Changes” button.
Once you enable the AMP support from the general settings for posts, pages, the home page, etc then you need to check “amphtml” tag in the source code of your Non-AMP pages like below screenshot.
If you have Google Search Console connected to your website you will see how many of your AMP pages are indexed. It can take some time before they show up in Search Console, so please be patient.
Once you enable the AMP support from the general settings for posts, pages, the home page, etc then you need to check “canonical” tag in the source code of your AMP pages like below screenshot.
<link rel="canonical" href="url-of-original-post-or-page" />
Note: Google will not flag your AMP pages as duplicate content because of this line of code within your AMP page:
That’s it for this tutorial!
We hope it helped you. If you have any feedback or questions, then please share them in the comments section below.
Is there any easy way within the amp for wp app on WordPress that will register my amp for wp pro extensions? Stated similarly as I’m unaware of how to make my purchased extensions usable. Would any issue arise If I register my site URL with a domain I’m about to change? Much gratitude and respect for anyone who can help me understand these questions indefinitely.
Hi Nicky,
Will you please contact our technical team from here- https://ampforwp.com/support/ they will help you as soon as possible.