Meta Tags Analyzer

Analyze on-page SEO elements — title, meta description, headings, canonical, viewport, and more.

Title & descHeading checkCanonical~2 seconds
This tool analyzes the single URL you enter, not your entire website.
Analyzing...Running checks. This usually takes a few seconds.

What We Check

Every check comes with a pass/fail result and specific fix instructions.

Title Tag

Optimal length (20-70 chars), uniqueness, keyword presence.

Meta Description

Length check (70-170 chars), compelling copy for CTR.

Heading Structure

H1 presence, single H1 rule, sequential hierarchy.

Canonical URL

Duplicate content prevention with proper canonical tag.

Viewport

Mobile-friendly viewport meta tag for responsive rendering.

Language

HTML lang attribute for internationalization and accessibility.

Title Length

Google displays 50-60 characters. Too short wastes SERP space; too long gets truncated.

Description Length

Optimal 120-160 characters. Google shows ~155 on desktop, ~120 on mobile.

Character Encoding

UTF-8 encoding declared as first element in head for proper character rendering.

No Noindex Tag

Checks for accidental noindex meta tag that blocks search engine indexing.

Single H1

Multiple H1 tags confuse search engines about the main topic of the page.

Favicon

Favicon in browser tabs, bookmarks, and search results. Improves brand recognition.

Why It Matters

Numbers that make a difference for your website.

12

Elements

Complete on-page scan

CTR

Impact

Better SERP snippets

SEO

Score

Pass/fail for each tag

Instant

Results

Under 2 seconds

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this tool and how to use the results.

Why is the title tag so important?
The title tag is the #1 on-page SEO factor. It appears in search results, browser tabs, and social shares. Google uses it to understand page topic.
What is the ideal meta description length?
120-160 characters. Google shows ~155 chars on desktop, ~120 on mobile. Too short wastes SERP real estate; too long gets truncated.
Should every page have exactly one H1?
Yes. Google's John Mueller has confirmed that one H1 per page is best practice. It tells search engines the main topic.

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