SEOWebsiteTool

SEO UTILITIES

Meta Tags Analyzer — Free Meta Tag Checker

Fetch and review a page's title, meta description, robots, and social tags with length feedback. See exactly what search engines and social apps read.

Point this at any URL and it fetches the page, reads the <head>, and lays out the meta tags a search engine and a social app would see — title, meta description, robots directive, canonical link, and Open Graph and Twitter Card tags. Where a generator writes tags, this checks the ones already live, and flags the issues that actually cost you.

What the warnings mean

  • Title too long: it'll be truncated with an ellipsis past roughly 50-60 characters, so the end may never show. Tighten it.
  • Missing description: search engines will improvise a snippet from page text, usually less compelling than one you write.
  • robots: noindex: correct on admin or thank-you pages, but a serious problem if it appears on a page you want ranked — this is the highest-priority flag to check.
  • No Open Graph tags: shared links get an ugly or blank preview because the platform is left guessing at the title and image.

How to use it

  1. Enter the URL whose meta tags you want to inspect.
  2. The tool fetches the HTML and extracts the relevant <head> tags.
  3. Work through the reported tags and warnings, fixing anything missing or over-length.

Troubleshooting

The analyzer shows no tags even though I can see them in my code.
Your tags are probably injected by JavaScript after load. This tool reads the server's HTML, so client-side tags don't appear — and some crawlers won't see them either, which is worth fixing by rendering them server-side.
My competitor's tags load but mine time out.
Some servers block automated requests or require cookies. If a fetch fails, confirm the page is publicly reachable without a login and isn't rate-limiting rapid requests.

Frequently asked questions

Can it analyze any website or just mine?
Any publicly reachable URL. Meta tags are part of the public HTML, so you can inspect competitors' tags for research as well as auditing your own.
Why does my canonical tag matter here?
The canonical tells search engines which URL is the authoritative version of a page. Seeing it confirmed here helps you catch a canonical pointing at the wrong URL, a common cause of the wrong page ranking.

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