Meta Title Length Checker
Check if your SEO title fits Google's display limit. Free, instant, private.
What does this tool do?
This tool checks the character length of your meta title so you can avoid truncation in Google search results. Google typically displays 50-60 characters on desktop and fewer on mobile before cutting off with "...".
✅ Best for: Blog posts, product pages, service pages, landing pages, and any page you want to rank in search.
How to use
- Type or paste your proposed meta title
- Click "Check Length" or see live results
- Review the character count and recommendation
- Adjust your title if it's too long
Examples
✅ Example 1: Good title (55 characters)
Input: "Best Silk Sarees in Coimbatore - Buy Online"
Output: 55 characters — Within the recommended limit
❌ Example 2: Too long (78 characters)
Input: "Best Silk Sarees in Coimbatore for Wedding and Festivals - Shop Now"
Output: 78 characters — Will be truncated in search results
💡 Example 3: Perfect with brand (58 characters)
Input: "Silk Sarees Coimbatore | Buy Traditional Sarees | Tyzo"
Output: 58 characters — Ideal length with brand at end
Common mistakes to avoid
- ❌ Writing titles over 60 characters — they get cut off
- ❌ Keyword stuffing — hurts CTR and rankings
- ❌ Forgetting your brand name — lost brand recognition
- ❌ Using all caps — looks spammy
- ❌ Duplicate titles across multiple pages — confuses Google
Best practices
- ✅ Keep titles between 50-60 characters for desktop
- ✅ Put important keywords first (within first 50-60 characters)
- ✅ Add your brand name at the end if space allows
- ✅ Make each title unique across your site
- ✅ Write for clicks, not just SEO — include value proposition
Frequently asked questions
Yes. Completely free. No sign-up, no credit card, no hidden fees.
No. Everything runs in your browser. We never store, log, or save your inputs. Your privacy is guaranteed.
50-60 characters is the safe zone for desktop results. Mobile may show 50-55 characters. Always put the most important information first.
Yes. Meta titles are a strong ranking factor. They also heavily influence click-through rates (CTR).
Yes, but each emoji counts as 1-2 characters. Use them sparingly and only when relevant.