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SERP Snippet Preview

See exactly how your page will look in Google search results. Craft the perfect title tag and meta description to maximize your click-through rate.

0/60

0/160

Desktop preview

https://example.com/your-page

Your Page Title Will Appear Here

Your meta description will appear here. Write a compelling summary to encourage searchers to click through to your page.

This is an approximation. Google may display your snippet differently depending on the search query and device.

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How to use this tool

  1. 1
    Enter your title tagType the title you want to appear in search results. Keep it under 60 characters.
  2. 2
    Write your meta descriptionAdd a compelling description under 160 characters that encourages clicks.
  3. 3
    Preview your snippetSee a live Google-styled preview and fine-tune your text until it looks perfect.

Why preview your SERP snippet?

Frequently asked questions

What is a SERP snippet?

A SERP snippet is the block of text that Google displays for each search result. It typically includes a blue title link, a green URL, and a gray description pulled from your page's meta description or page content.

What is the ideal title tag length for Google?

Google typically displays the first 50-60 characters of a title tag. Titles longer than 60 characters may be truncated with an ellipsis. Aim for under 60 characters to ensure your full title is visible in search results.

What is the ideal meta description length?

Google usually shows up to 155-160 characters of a meta description on desktop. On mobile, it may be shorter. Keep your meta description under 160 characters and front-load the most important information.

Does the meta description affect my Google ranking?

Meta descriptions are not a direct ranking factor. However, a compelling meta description can significantly improve your click-through rate (CTR), which may indirectly influence rankings over time. Google also sometimes bolds keywords in the description that match the search query.

Why does Google sometimes show a different snippet than my meta description?

Google may rewrite your snippet if it believes other content on your page better matches the user's search query. This is common when the meta description is missing, too short, or not relevant to the specific search term. Writing specific, keyword-rich meta descriptions reduces the chance of Google overriding them.

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