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Home Web & SEO Tools SERP Preview
🔍 SEO ✅ 100% Free ⚡ Instant Preview

SERP Preview

See exactly how your page will appear in Google, Bing and mobile search results. Preview your title tag, meta description and URL in real-time as you type — before you publish.

Enter your page details
Page Title 0 / 60
Page URL Optional
Meta Description 0 / 160
🌐
example.com
https://example.com
Your page title will appear here
Your meta description will appear here. Make it compelling — this is what convinces searchers to click your result over others.
📊 SEO Analysis
Title Tag
Meta Description
URL
📏 Character Limits
FieldGoogleIdeal
Title Tag~600px50–60
Meta Desc~920px120–160
URL SlugNo limit< 75
Google measures in pixels, not characters. Actual cutoff varies by font and device. These character counts are reliable guidelines.
📊 Live Stats
Title length 0 chars
Description length 0 chars
Word count (desc) 0 words
Title truncated?
💡 Writing Tips
🎯
Include your primary keyword near the start of both the title and description.
✂️
Keep titles under 60 chars to avoid truncation with "…" in search results.
📢
Use action words in descriptions — "Discover", "Get", "Learn" improve CTR.
🚫
Avoid keyword stuffing — Google may rewrite your title if it looks spammy.

What is a SERP Preview Tool?

A SERP (Search Engine Results Page) preview tool shows you exactly how your web page will look in Google, Bing, and mobile search results before you publish it. It renders a pixel-accurate simulation of the search snippet — including the clickable blue title, the green URL breadcrumb, and the grey meta description text — so you can fine-tune your copy to maximise click-through rates.

This tool updates in real-time as you type, with live character counters, colour-coded length warnings, and an SEO analysis score for each field — no button to press, no page reload needed.

Why Your Title Tag and Meta Description Matter

  • Title tag is the single most important on-page SEO element. It appears as the clickable headline in search results and is a confirmed Google ranking factor.
  • Meta description is not a ranking factor, but it directly affects click-through rate (CTR) — a compelling description can double the traffic you get from the same ranking position.
  • Truncation — titles over ~60 characters and descriptions over ~160 characters get cut off with "…" in most search results, losing your key message.
  • Google rewrites — if your title is too long, keyword-stuffed, or mismatches the page content, Google may replace it entirely with its own generated title.
  • Mobile vs desktop — mobile SERPs show slightly fewer characters than desktop, making it even more important to front-load your key message.

Frequently Asked Questions

Google displays titles up to approximately 600 pixels wide, which corresponds to roughly 50–60 characters in a typical font. Titles shorter than 50 characters may be missing an opportunity to include important keywords. Titles longer than 60 characters risk being truncated with "…". This tool highlights the ideal 50–60 character range in green and shows a warning above 60.
No — Google rewrites meta descriptions roughly 70% of the time, typically when it finds a passage on your page that better matches the user's search query. However, a well-written meta description is still valuable: it's displayed for branded searches and queries where your description closely matches the keyword, and it signals to Google what your page is about.
CTR (Click-Through Rate) is the percentage of people who click your result after seeing it in search results. While Google doesn't officially confirm CTR as a direct ranking factor, high CTR indicates your result is relevant and satisfies users — and Google does use "user signals" in its algorithm. More importantly, a 2× improvement in CTR from the same ranking position means 2× the traffic without needing to rank higher.
Yes, for most pages — but put it at the end, after the primary keyword. The format "Primary Keyword – Secondary Keyword | Brand Name" is the most common and effective pattern. Google typically appends your brand name itself for well-established sites, so if your site is new, including it manually helps with brand recognition. For your homepage, the brand name can come first.
Google displays a "breadcrumb" version of your URL that it generates from your site's structured data or your URL path. It replaces the raw URL (e.g. https://example.com/blog/my-post) with a human-readable breadcrumb (e.g. example.com › blog › My Post). This preview shows the raw URL, which is a close approximation of what Google will display for most sites.
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