Meta Tag Generator
Generate SEO-friendly meta tags for your web pages.
Page Information
Generated Meta Tags
About this tool
Fill in your page's title, description, canonical URL, and share image once, and get a complete head-ready block covering the basic SEO pair, the Open Graph cluster (og:title, og:description, og:image, og:url, og:type), and the Twitter Card variant — so your link renders correctly in Google SERPs, LinkedIn previews, Slack unfurls, iMessage, and X cards without you having to remember which platform expects which tag. A live preview shows how the result will look in a Google snippet and a generic social card, with character-count hints so titles and descriptions don't get truncated mid-sentence. Handy when you're shipping a static landing page without a framework, adding meta tags to a CMS template that doesn't have an SEO plugin, or sanity-checking what a hand-written Next.js generateMetadata is emitting.
Features
- Generate title and description meta tags
- Create Open Graph tags for social media sharing
- Generate Twitter Card meta tags
- Preview how your page appears in search results
How to Use
- Enter your page title and description
- Fill in Open Graph and Twitter Card fields
- Preview the search result and social media appearance
- Copy the generated HTML meta tags to your page
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should my meta description be?
Aim for 120–160 characters. Google truncates most snippets around 155–160 on desktop and shorter on mobile. Write a complete sentence that invites a click — keyword stuffing no longer helps, since Google frequently rewrites descriptions based on query intent anyway.
What's the right og:image size?
1200×630 is the universally safe size: it satisfies X large card, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Slack. Keep any text inside the inner 1000×500 safe zone so nothing gets cropped on smaller previews, and keep the file under 1 MB so scrapers don't time out.
Does my page need a canonical tag?
Yes, if the same page is reachable via multiple URLs (with/without trailing slash, different query parameters, paginated views). A self-referencing canonical also helps on sites with no duplicates because it gives Google an unambiguous preferred URL to index.
Do meta keywords still do anything?
Not for Google, Bing, or DuckDuckGo — they've been ignored for over a decade. Some small regional search engines still read them, but the ranking weight is near zero. If you want search engines to understand topicality, write descriptive body content and use structured data instead.
How do I stop Google from rewriting my meta description?
You can't fully — Google pulls snippets from body copy when it thinks they'll answer a query better. What you can do is write a description that directly answers the target query and uses words from the page body. That raises the chance Google keeps it.