SRSLTID Stripper
Remove SRSLTID Parameters from The Search Results
?srsltid= appended to URLs. This extension automatically strips these parameters, giving you cleaner URLs and reducing tracking.								
															Why Strip “?srsltid=” Parameters From The Search Results?
If you’re an SEO, marketer, or developer who spends half your day in Google search results, you’ve definitely noticed the ?srsltid= parameter showing up for eCommerce sites.
It’s there for a reason! Google uses it for conversion tracking through Merchant Center, and it’s actually useful data.
But when you’re doing competitor research, auditing sites, sharing URLs with clients, or just trying to analyze search results without the tracking noise, those parameters get in the way.
You end up with messy URLs that are harder to read, tougher to share cleanly, and create unnecessary clutter when you’re trying to document findings or compare links.
That’s where this extension comes in.
SRSLTID Stripper automatically removes the ?srsltid= parameter from Google Search results.
It keeps your workflow clean without interfering with how the web actually works, because sometimes you just need the URL, not the tracking layer on top of it.
What the “?srsltid=” Parameter Means in Google Search
If you’ve seen URLs with ?srsltid= at the end, it’s a tracking parameter Google adds when a user clicks a product or shopping listing. It stands for Search Result Source Listing ID and helps Google attribute the click to the exact listing a user came from.
The parameter itself doesn’t impact rankings or indexation, but it can cause duplicate URLs in analytics and crawl reports. Treat it like a tracking tag, your canonical should always point to the clean version of the URL without the parameter.
In short:
- It’s a tracking identifier, not a ranking signal.
 - Safe to ignore for SEO, but clean it up for crawl clarity.
 - Make sure canonical tags and GA filters point to the base URL.