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The quickest ways to create or fetch feeds from RSS
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This wikiHow guide teaches you how to find the address of a website’s RSS feed so you can add it to your newsreader, start page, or website.

Getting an RSS Web Feed from Any Site

  1. Open your chosen website in any browser.
  2. Set your cursor at the end of the URL in the address bar.
  3. Type /feed/ and hit Enter.
Method 1
Method 1 of 5:

Adding ″Feed″ to the URL (Computer or Mobile)

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  1. This method will work on any website powered by WordPress, which is about 30% of websites on the internet.[1]
  2. The cursor should now be on the last character of the URL.
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  3. Adding this text to the end of the URL will take you to the RSS feed as long as the site uses WordPress. You’ll know you’ve found the feed when you see a white page containing a bunch of raw web code.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 5:

Using the RSS Icon

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  1. Many websites (but not all) display an RSS feed icon somewhere on the page.
    EXPERT TIP
    Tyrone Showers

    Tyrone Showers

    Technologist
    Tyrone Showers is a Technologist and the Co-owner of Taliferro Group, an IT consulting company based in Seattle, Washington. With over 35 years of professional experience, he specializes in API Design, e-Commerce, Operational Efficiency, and website development. He has a B.S. in Computer Science from DeVry Institute of Technology.
    Tyrone Showers
    Tyrone Showers
    Technologist

    Follow your favorite websites' updates by subscribing to RSS feeds. An RSS feed is a web feed that enables easy distribution of website content to other applications. Look for an RSS feed icon or link on the website and click it to subscribe. You will be able to receive updates directly in your preferred RSS reader.

  2. It’s an orange square with a white dot at the bottom-left corner and two white curved lines above the dot. The icon is usually small.
  3. If this icon appears on the page, clicking or tapping it should bring up a text-only version of the page in raw code. This means the URL of the RSS feed is currently in the browser’s address bar and you can copy and paste it anywhere you’d like.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 5:

Using Autodiscovery in Firefox (on a Computer)

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  1. Mozilla Firefox attempts to locate a website’s RSS feed automatically. If an RSS feed for the site is found, a link to the feed will appear near the top-right corner of the browser in the address bar.[2]
  2. Look at the far-right corner of the address bar (where you typed the URL). If you see an orange square with a white dot at the bottom-left corner and two white curved lines above the dot, click it to open the RSS feed. The URL of the feed will then appear in the address bar, ready to be copied.
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Method 4
Method 4 of 5:

Viewing the Page Source

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  1. You should be able to find a link to a website’s RSS feed in its raw source code.
  2. The steps to do this vary by browser.[3]
    • In Chrome on a computer, right-click the page and select View page source.
    • In Chrome for Android, tap your finger right before the URL in the address bar to insert the cursor before the first character, type view-source:, and then tap Enter or Go.[4]
    • In Safari for macOS, you’ll have to enable the Develop menu to view source code. Open the Safari menu, click Preferences, click the Advanced tab, and then check the box next to ″Show Develop menu in menu bar.″ Now you can right-click the page and select Show Page Source.
    • On an iPhone or iPad, you’ll need to install an app like HTML Viewer Q or iSource Browser from the App Store. Once installed, open the app and follow the on-screen instructions to find a page’s source code.
    • In Firefox on a computer, right-click the page and select View Page Source.
    • In Edge for Windows, right-click the page and select View Source. If you don’t see this option, click the menu at the top-right corner, select Developer Tools, and then close the developer tools box by clicking the X at the top-right corner. This enables the View Source option.
    • On a computer, click somewhere in the code and press Command+F (Mac) or Control+F (PC), type rss, and then press Enter or Return. This should take you to a line that starts with <link rel and contains the text ″application/rss+xml.″
    • In Chrome for Android, tap the menu, tap Find in Page, type rss and tap the magnifying glass.[5]
  3. The URL of the site’s RSS feed is the address that appears after ″href=″ in the line. Copy that URL and paste it into the desired location.
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Method 5
Method 5 of 5:

Creating an RSS Feed

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  1. Go to http://createfeed.fivefilters.org/ in a web browser. If you can’t find a site’s RSS feed (or if a site doesn’t have one), you can create one for the site at no cost using this tool.
    EXPERT TIP
    Tyrone Showers

    Tyrone Showers

    Technologist
    Tyrone Showers is a Technologist and the Co-owner of Taliferro Group, an IT consulting company based in Seattle, Washington. With over 35 years of professional experience, he specializes in API Design, e-Commerce, Operational Efficiency, and website development. He has a B.S. in Computer Science from DeVry Institute of Technology.
    Tyrone Showers
    Tyrone Showers
    Technologist

    Choose a method to create an RSS feed for your website. Many CMS platforms and website builders offer built-in functionalities for a user-friendly approach. Services like Feedburner or Feedly create basic feeds based on your website details. For more control over the structure, consider coding an XML template.

  2. Type or paste the URL into the ″Enter page URL″ field near the top of the form.
  3. It’s the green button near the bottom of the form.
  4. It’s the first gray button beneath the site’s title under the ″Results″ header. This opens the RSS feed in your web browser—it looks like raw website code. The URL for the RSS feed is now located in the address bar at the top of the browser, ready to be copied.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    Is it free to get an RSS feed?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    Yes, you can create a free RSS feed for your website, and most website builders offer RSS feed creation tools built in. You can also create an RSS feed for any other website for free using an RSS feed generator like RSS.app.
  • Question
    Can I legally use an RSS feed on my own website?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    If you want to display an RSS feed from a different website or blog on your own site, you can do so. Website builders like WordPress and Squarespace even have widgets you can use to display your desired RSS feeds.
  • Question
    How do I add an RSS feed to my website?
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    This answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    wikiHow Staff Editor
    Staff Answer
    You can install an RSS viewer like Fluent Reader to see RSS feeds on your desktop. You can also add an RSS extension to your web browser to display RSS feeds in a separate tab or sidebar, or add them to email apps like Outlook and Mozilla Thunderbird.
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About This Article

Nicole Levine, MFA
Written by:
wikiHow Technology Writer
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Nicole Levine, MFA. Nicole Levine is a Technology Writer and Editor for wikiHow. She has more than 20 years of experience creating technical documentation and leading support teams at major web hosting and software companies. Nicole also holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Portland State University and teaches composition, fiction-writing, and zine-making at various institutions. This article has been viewed 121,260 times.
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Co-authors: 9
Updated: April 29, 2025
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