Title and Meta Description Checker
See how your page titles and descriptions look on Google
How to Use This Tool
Check your page’s title and description in three easy steps.
Paste Your Website Link
Copy any webpage link and paste it into the checker. The tool automatically grabs your page title, description, and website icon.
Check the Length
See how many characters your title and description have. The tool shows you if they’re too short, too long, or just right for Google.
See the Google Preview
View how your page will look on Google search results on both computers and phones before you publish.
Title & Meta Description Checker
Check how your page title and description appear on Google search results. This tool helps you make sure your text isn’t cut off and looks good to people searching online. When your title and description look better, more people click on your website.
What Are Title Tags and Meta Descriptions?
A title tag is the blue clickable headline you see on Google when you search for something. A meta description is the gray text below the title that explains what the page is about.
Think of them like a book cover and summary. The title catches your eye, and the description helps you decide if you want to read more. Good titles and descriptions help more people find and click on your website.
Why Should You Use This Checker?
This tool helps you avoid common mistakes like titles that are cut off, descriptions that are too long, or missing text that makes your page hard to find on Google.
What You Get:
- Character counter: Know exactly how long your title and description are
- Score system: See if your lengths are good or need fixing
- Preview display: See how Google shows your page on computers and phones
- Quick fetch: Just paste a link and the tool does the rest
- Easy to understand: Colors and simple displays show you what’s good or bad
What Does This Tool Check?
The checker looks at your page information and tells you if it follows Google’s best practices:
- Title length (best is 30 to 60 characters)
- Description length (best is 70 to 155 characters)
- Overall quality score
- How it looks on Google search results
- Your website icon and name
This makes sure your pages look professional and easy to read when people search on Google.
Start Checking Your Titles and Descriptions
Paste your website link, make changes to your title and description if needed, and see how Google will show your page. This tool helps you create better search results that get more clicks.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the ideal length for a page title?
The best length for a page title is between 30 to 60 characters. This ensures Google shows your full title in search results without cutting it off. Titles shorter than 30 characters might not use enough space, while titles longer than 60 characters will likely be truncated with "..." at the end.
How long should my meta description be?
A good meta description is between 70 to 155 characters. This range gives you enough space to explain what your page is about while staying within Google's display limits. Descriptions longer than 155 characters will be cut off in search results.
Does this tool work for any website?
Yes! You can check any publicly accessible webpage. Just paste the complete URL (starting with https://) and the tool will automatically fetch the title, meta description, and favicon from that page.
What is the SEO score based on?
The SEO score evaluates how well your title and meta description follow Google's recommended character limits. A higher score means your metadata is optimized for better visibility and click-through rates in search results.
Why do title and meta descriptions matter for SEO?
While they don't directly change your Google ranking, well-written titles and descriptions help more people click on your website from search results. Higher click-through rates signal to Google that your content is valuable, which can improve your rankings over time.
What happens if my title is too long?
If your title exceeds 60 characters, Google will cut it off and add "..." at the end. This means people won't see your complete message in search results. The tool highlights this with a warning color so you can shorten it.