A 404 error usually means the page URL is wrong, the page was moved, or the redirect is missing.
A 404 error means the browser reached the website, but the specific page it was trying to load does not exist at that address.
That is an important distinction. It usually means the site is up, but the requested page path is incorrect, outdated, deleted, or no longer mapped properly.
This often happens when a page has been renamed, moved, unpublished, or removed without the old URL being redirected. It can also happen when a menu, button, or external link still points to an outdated path.
Sometimes the problem is as simple as a typo in the URL. Other times it is a sign that old content structure was changed without the right redirect setup.
If you find a 404, note where you clicked from. Was it from the website menu, a button, a social link, Google, or a saved bookmark? That matters because the source helps identify whether the issue is internal, external, or historical.
When you raise it with us, send the broken URL and where you found it. “This page is broken” is less useful than “this button on the services page sends me to a 404.” That level of detail makes the fix much faster.