3 Free Ways to Automate GSC Reporting (No Code)

Get GSC data into reports automatically without writing code. Looker Studio, Sheets add-ons, and email exports.

By Ben Peetermans

You don’t need to code to automate GSC reporting. Google provides free tools that connect directly to Search Console and update automatically. This is part of the broader topic of exporting and automating GSC data.

MethodSetupWhat You GetLimitationsBest For
Looker StudioEasy — authorize + select propertyVisual dashboards, shareable links, auto-refreshRow limits, slow on large datasetsClient reports, team dashboards
Sheets add-onEasy — install official add-onRaw data, up to 25k rows, formula-readyManual refresh, no auto-schedulingAnalysis, custom calculations
GSC email alertsTrivial — flip toggles in SettingsAutomatic problem notificationsIssues only, no performance summariesProblem detection

Here are three methods that require zero programming.

Method 1: Looker Studio (best for dashboards)

Looker Studio (formerly Data Studio) creates visual dashboards from GSC data:

Setup:

  1. Go to lookerstudio.google.com
  2. Click “Create” → “Data source”
  3. Select “Search Console” from connectors
  4. Authorize and select your property
  5. Choose “Site impression” or “URL impression” table
  6. Click “Create Report”

What you get:

  • Visual charts and graphs
  • Automatic data refresh
  • Shareable links and embeds
  • Filter controls for date ranges

Limitations:

  • Same row limits as GSC web interface
  • Learning curve for complex dashboards
  • Can be slow with large datasets

Best for: Client reports, team dashboards, visual presentations.

Method 2: Google Sheets add-on (best for raw data)

The official Search Console add-on pulls data directly into Sheets:

Setup:

  1. Open Google Sheets
  2. Extensions → Add-ons → Get add-ons
  3. Search “Search Console” → Install Google’s official add-on
  4. Extensions → Search Console → Open sidebar
  5. Select property, dates, dimensions, metrics
  6. Click “Request Data”

What you get:

  • Raw data in spreadsheet format
  • Up to 25,000 rows (vs 1,000 in web export)
  • Ability to add formulas and analysis

Limitations:

  • Manual refresh (no auto-scheduling without scripts)
  • Still limited to 25,000 rows

Best for: Analysis, custom calculations, data manipulation.

Method 3: GSC email alerts (simplest)

GSC sends automated email alerts for certain events:

Available alerts:

  • Index coverage issues
  • Manual actions
  • Security issues
  • Performance anomalies (limited)

Setup:

  1. Go to Search Console
  2. Settings → Email preferences
  3. Enable the alerts you want

What you get:

  • Automatic notification of problems
  • No dashboard to check

Limitations:

  • Very limited scope — only errors and issues
  • No regular performance summaries
  • Can’t customize what triggers alerts

Best for: Problem detection, not regular reporting.

Comparison: Which to use?

NeedBest option
Visual dashboardLooker Studio
Spreadsheet analysisSheets add-on
Problem alertsGSC email
Daily monitoringDedicated tool

For most users, Looker Studio handles reporting and GSC email handles alerts. That combination covers 80% of use cases without any code.

When you need more

These free tools have limitations:

  • Row limits prevent seeing all your data
  • No historical storage beyond 16 months
  • No change tracking — you see current state, not what changed
  • Manual checking still required

If you want automatic change detection and historical tracking, SerpDelta connects to GSC and surfaces what actually matters.

Quick start recommendation

Start here: Looker Studio for reporting + GSC email alerts for problem detection. That combination covers 80% of use cases at zero cost — no code, no setup complexity. Add the Sheets add-on only when you need deeper data analysis.

For small sites (under 1,000 queries): Looker Studio dashboard + GSC email alerts. Free and sufficient.

For larger sites: Consider Sheets add-on for deeper analysis, or a dedicated tool that handles the complexity.

Start simple. Add complexity only when you hit real limitations.

See also: building a Looker Studio dashboard and automating GSC to Google Sheets.