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SERP Preview

Preview how your page looks in Google search results

Calculator

Max: 60 title / 160 desc
Google Search PreviewDesktop View
example.com
page-slug

Your Amazing Page Title - Brand Name

This is your meta description. It should summarize the page content and entice users to click through from search results. Keep it informative and compelling.

36/60

Acceptable length

158/160

Optimal length

Rich Snippet Options

Sample Presets

SEO Tips for SERP Optimization

  • Title: Include your primary keyword near the beginning. Keep it between 50-60 characters.
  • Description: Write a compelling summary with a call-to-action. 150-160 characters is ideal.
  • URL: Use descriptive, keyword-rich URLs with hyphens. Avoid special characters.
  • Mobile: Google uses mobile-first indexing, so always check mobile preview.

Character Limits Reference

Desktop

Title: ~60 characters

Description: ~160 characters

Mobile

Title: ~55 characters

Description: ~120 characters

How to Use

Preview how your page will appear in Google search results

1

Enter page details

Input your title tag, URL, and meta description

2

Check length

See character and pixel counts with truncation warnings

3

Preview result

View realistic Google search result preview on desktop and mobile

4

Optimize

Adjust title and description to improve appearance and CTR

Frequently Asked Questions

SERP (Search Engine Results Page) preview shows how your page appears in Google search results. It displays title, URL, and meta description. Optimizing these elements improves click-through rates (CTR), which can indirectly boost rankings.

Keep titles under 60 characters (or 600 pixels wide) to avoid truncation in search results. Front-load important keywords. Google may rewrite titles that are too long, duplicate, or do not match page content.

Aim for 150-160 characters (or 920 pixels). Google truncates longer descriptions with ellipsis. Include target keywords, a clear value proposition, and a call-to-action. Google may generate its own description if yours is not relevant.

No, Google often generates its own snippet from page content if it better matches the search query. Well-written, relevant meta descriptions are more likely to be used. Include keywords users are searching for to increase match likelihood.

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