SEO Diagnostics

Meta Analyzer

Scan any URL to review title tags, meta descriptions, canonical links, and social card tags in one report.

The Meta Analyzer scans a public URL and reports the SEO-critical tags it finds, including titles, descriptions, canonical links, Open Graph, and Twitter Card data. It highlights missing or duplicate fields and flags length issues that can weaken click-through rates.

Meta report

Results will appear here with tag values, lengths, and warnings.

What this tool does

The Meta Analyzer scans a public URL and reports the SEO-critical tags it finds, including titles, descriptions, canonical links, Open Graph, and Twitter Card data. It highlights missing or duplicate fields and flags length issues that can weaken click-through rates. The report shows exactly what search engines and social networks read first.

When to use this tool

Use it before publishing a new page, during a content refresh, or when diagnosing poor snippet performance. It pairs well with Meta Tag Preview to see how those tags render in search and social contexts, and with URL Expander when auditing shortened or redirected URLs.

How it works

The tool fetches the page HTML, parses relevant meta tags, and measures their lengths against common platform recommendations. It then groups results into a readable report so you can spot missing titles, empty descriptions, or mismatched Open Graph content in seconds.

Example use case

You are preparing a product launch page and want to ensure the metadata is correct. Paste the URL, review the title and description lengths, and confirm Open Graph image tags exist. After adjusting the copy, run the scan again to verify the report is clean and consistent.

Use cases

  • Audit metadata on a new landing page before launch.
  • Compare staging and production tags after deployment.
  • Check canonical and Open Graph tags during a migration.

Notes & limitations

The analyzer reads the HTML it can access directly and may not execute complex client-side rendering. If a site uses heavy JavaScript for metadata, results may be incomplete. Always test final previews on the platforms you care about, since each platform has its own truncation rules.

Some pages use multiple title or description tags; the analyzer reports what it finds but cannot always predict which value a search engine will choose. If your platform generates metadata dynamically, run the scan on the live URL rather than a staging build to avoid misleading results.

If you use canonical URLs, confirm they point to the primary version of the page to avoid duplicate indexing.

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