Purge AMP CDN Cache 2.0.7
Purge AMP CDN Cache lets you clear Google's AMP CDN cache right from your WordPress admin, giving you instant control over your AMP pages and faster updates. The main benefit is faster, fresher content delivery and improved search visibility. Quick to install with seamless integration and a clean admin experience.
Description
Purge AMP CDN Cache is a WordPress plugin that lets you clear Google’s AMP CDN cache directly from your WordPress admin area. When you update AMP page content, caching can delay how quickly fresh changes appear in search and on mobile. This plugin gives you instant control to purge the cached AMP resources so your latest content is served sooner. It’s designed for simple, quick installation with a clean admin experience, helping site owners manage AMP updates without leaving WordPress.
Main Features
- One-click AMP CDN purge — Clear the Google AMP CDN cache from the WordPress dashboard.
- Admin-only workflow — Perform cache clearing without extra tools or external dashboards.
- Targets AMP content — Focuses on AMP page assets cached via Google’s AMP CDN.
- Faster content refresh — Helps new AMP updates reach users sooner after edits.
- Clear visibility in WordPress — Keeps AMP cache management organized inside your site admin.
- Quick setup — Straightforward installation so you can start purging immediately.
- Clean admin experience — User-friendly interface designed for day-to-day AMP maintenance.
Benefits
- Fresher AMP delivery — Reduces delays between publishing changes and reflecting them to mobile users.
- Improved search visibility — Supports timely updates of AMP content that can affect indexing and presentation.
- Better update control — Lets you manage Google CDN cache behavior from within WordPress.
- Streamlined workflow — Avoids manual steps outside your WordPress admin when AMP pages change.
- Reduced uncertainty — Makes it easier to confirm that updates are actually refreshed on the AMP CDN side.
Who is it suitable for?
- WordPress publishers with AMP-enabled posts and pages.
- WooCommerce store owners that use AMP for product and category pages.
- SEO-focused website managers maintaining content freshness on mobile.
- Agencies supporting multiple AMP sites for different clients.
- Blog and news site teams that frequently update articles.
- Developers who deploy AMP templates and need reliable cache refreshes.