Enter your meta title and description in our free checker to preview Google snippets and validate SEO character limits before you publish.
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Meta titles and descriptions are often the first version of your page that searchers see. A strong title can communicate the page topic quickly, while a clear description can set expectations and improve the chance that the right person clicks through.
Use this meta title and description checker before publishing landing pages, blog posts, comparison pages, and product pages. It helps you keep snippets within common display ranges, avoid vague copy, and write search results that match the intent of the page.
Lumafly's free Meta Title and Description Checker helps marketers and founders validate SEO snippets before publishing landing pages, blog posts, product pages, and campaign pages. Use it as a free SERP preview tool to check titles, descriptions, URLs, and how your snippet may appear in Google search results.
Meta title
30 to 60 characters
Truncates around 60 characters in Google
Meta description
70 to 160 characters
Truncates around 160 characters in Google
Best practice
Unique copy for every page
Avoid repeating the title in the description
Paste your page title, meta description, and optional URL.
See character counts, remaining space, and hardcoded SEO warnings in real time.
Review a live SERP-style preview before you publish or update your page.
Use the free meta title and description checker when drafting homepage metadata, blog post snippets, pricing pages, feature pages, comparison pages, and campaign landing pages. Start the title with the primary search phrase, then make the description specific enough to help a searcher decide whether to click.
Google may rewrite snippets, but a clear title and meta description still help align the page with search intent and give your team a consistent preview before publishing. Treat the title like ad copy for the page: it should be accurate, keyword-relevant, and compelling without turning into a list of repeated terms.
The description should summarize the value of the page in plain language. Include the main topic, a concrete benefit, and a reason to continue. If the page targets two related search intents, use one sentence for each so the snippet still reads naturally.
Searchers scan quickly. Put the page topic or primary keyword near the beginning of the title when it reads naturally.
Duplicate titles and descriptions make it harder for search engines and users to understand why each page exists.
A snippet should answer what the page is about and why it is worth visiting. Avoid vague descriptions that could fit any page.
Check how the title, URL, and description look together. A good snippet should be clear even when shortened in search results.
Everything you need to know about meta title and description length
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