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Meta Tag Checker

Meta tags are the first thing Google and social media platforms read about your page. Missing or poorly written meta tags mean lower click-through rates and worse rankings. Check everything in one click.

What does the Meta Tag Checker check?

Everything you need to know about your meta tag checker in one report.

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Title Tag

Checks your page title length (50–60 chars ideal) and whether it's missing or duplicated.

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Meta Description

Validates description length (150–160 chars ideal) and checks for keyword inclusion.

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Canonical URL

Verifies a canonical tag exists and points to the correct URL to prevent duplicate content.

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Open Graph Tags

Checks OG title, description, and image for proper social sharing on Facebook and LinkedIn.

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Twitter Card Tags

Validates Twitter card type, title, and description for correct display when shared on X.

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H1 Tag

Checks that exactly one H1 tag exists and contains your primary keyword.

How it works

1

Enter your URL

Paste the URL of any page you want to analyse — homepage, blog post, or landing page.

2

Instant analysis

SEO-Snap fetches your page and reads all meta tags, checking against SEO best practices.

3

Fix what's broken

Get a scored report showing exactly which tags are missing, too short, too long, or incorrect.

Ready to check your site?

Use the Meta Tag Checker free — no account required for a basic check. Sign up for full history, PDF reports, and all 12 tools at once.

Run Free Check →

Frequently asked questions

What is a meta title and how long should it be?

A meta title is the headline shown in Google search results and browser tabs. Keep it between 50–60 characters. Longer titles get cut off in search results.

Do meta keywords still matter for SEO?

No. Google stopped using the meta keywords tag in 2009. Focus on title, description, and content quality instead.

What are Open Graph tags?

Open Graph (OG) tags control how your page looks when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, and WhatsApp — the title, description, and image that appear in the preview card.

Why do I need a canonical tag?

If the same content is accessible at multiple URLs, Google can get confused about which to index. A canonical tag tells Google which URL is the "official" version.

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