


This means there are 4-5 different possible URLs for your feed. Likewise, if you have your blog installed in a subdirectory, it would be There are also technically four different possible types of RSS feed that might show up for WordPress, both with the /feed/ and the ?feed=rss variant.

So your test URL would look like This should bring you to the RSS feed if you have one set up. Instead, what you need to do is use a question parameter for the feed. If your URL structure looks like that, with a question mark in it, you won’t be able to find your feed with /feed/. This is using a parameter to call blog post data based on a number, in this case a basic date structure, though it can vary from installation to installation. What do I mean by structure? Older and default versions of WordPress will use a post format like for a blog post URL. If you don’t use a WordPress structure, things will be a little different. This will prove that you have RSS configured, though there is no easy way to go from a post-specific feed to a blog-generic feed. This will bring you to the specific RSS feed for the comments on that blog post. For example, if you have as a blog post URL, you can add /feed/ to the end of that. You can also look for the feed for an individual blog post. This can vary based on site configuration, so you can ask your developer if you have one and aren’t sure which directory is the blog root to begin with. You’re essentially looking for wordpressinstall/feed/. The reason this works is because the /feed/ goes off of whatever directory WordPress is installed in. Make sure it’s the base page for your blog, not a particular blog post. This, then, is your next step add /feed/ to the end of whatever your blog URL happens to be. However, if you go to you will find our RSS feed. We have set up as a homepage, and the blog itself is at If you go to you won’t find anything but a 404 page. However, it’s possible that you don’t have this basic configuration, particularly if your blog URL is not the same as your home page.įor an example of this configuration, you can look at this very blog. Many basic WordPress configurations have this feed structure set up already. So, say your website is Simply go to and see if your RSS feed exists.

Generally, this is root domain plus /feed/. The first and easiest way to find your RSS feed is to simply check to see if the usual standard configuration has a feed already set up and running.
