Google Search Profile URL Generator
Turn a name, a Google share link, or a KGMID into a direct link to that entity's Google Search Profile. Search your name and pick yourself, or switch tabs to paste a link you already have.
What's this for?
Google launched Search profiles on 4 June 2026, in the US first. But the profile pages already sit at a fixed URL for any entity Google knows about, so if you have one you can open yours from anywhere, US or not.
The only requirement is that Google has an entity for you. A Knowledge Panel means you definitely do, but plenty of creators have an entity without one. Here is mine as a live example.
Works even if you don't have a Knowledge Panel, as long as Google has an entity for you. It now creates them for a lot of creators from social presence alone.
Where do I get my share link or KGMID?
Easiest. Search your name or brand on Google, open your Knowledge Panel, and click the Share icon. Paste the share.google/... or g.co/kgs/... link it gives you straight into the box above, and the tool reads the KGMID out of it for you.
If you already have the raw ID, paste that instead. A KGMID looks like /g/11nnv1wqs6, or /m/03j24kf for older entities. A full Google search URL with a kgmid= parameter works too, as does a kg: prefixed ID from the Knowledge Graph Search API.
Try one
Profile URL
Not every entity has a published profile yet. The link always generates, but only opens if Google has built one.
How does this work?
Every Search Profile lives at profile.google.com/cp/ followed by the entity's KGMID, Base64 encoded inside a tiny Protobuf message. It's deterministic, so the same ID always gives the same link.
Search by name sends your query to Google's Knowledge Graph Search API through this site and builds a link for each match. The link tab also takes a share link, a search URL with a kgmid= parameter, or a raw KGMID. The encoding runs in your browser; the name search and the share link lookup use a small server endpoint that logs nothing.
Based on a technique shared by Nathan Jeffery and Jes Scholz.