Used for the breadcrumb path shown in results
0/60
Ideal length: 50-60 characters
0/160
Ideal length: 150-160 characters
๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ Desktop ๐Ÿ“ฑ Mobile
๐Ÿ”
๐ŸŒ
example.com
Your page title will appear here
Your meta description will appear here. Write something compelling that summarizes your page content and encourages clicks from search results.
๐Ÿ“Š Snippet Analysis

How Google Displays Title Tags and Meta Descriptions

Google's SERP (Search Engine Results Page) snippets consist of three main elements: the URL breadcrumb, the title tag (displayed as a blue clickable link), and the meta description. Together these three elements give searchers enough information to decide whether to click your result โ€” making them critical for both rankings and click-through rates.

Google measures title tag display width in pixels rather than characters. The typical desktop cutoff is around 580px, which corresponds to roughly 55-60 characters for average-width characters. However, narrow characters like i, l, 1 allow more total characters, while wide characters like W, M allow fewer. The safest target is 50-60 characters to reliably avoid truncation.

Google frequently rewrites title tags and meta descriptions when it determines they don't accurately represent the page content. To minimize rewrites: ensure your title matches the page's actual content, don't stuff keywords, avoid all-caps, and write meta descriptions that directly answer what a searcher would want to know before clicking.

Writing Click-Worthy SERP Snippets

  • Front-load keywords in titles โ€” Google bolds query-matching terms in results. Keywords appearing earlier in the title are generally more prominent and impactful.
  • Include the year in titles โ€” For informational content like "best of" guides, including the current year ("Best SEO Tools 2024") signals freshness and boosts CTR.
  • Use action words in descriptions โ€” "Learn," "Discover," "Get," and "Find" in descriptions create a sense of value and encourage clicks.
  • Match search intent โ€” Your description should directly match what searchers are looking for. If someone searches "how to," your snippet should confirm "here's how."

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