π Google SERP Preview
See exactly how your page will appear in Google search results. Optimize titles, descriptions, and rich snippets for maximum clicks.
π₯ Desktop Preview
Your Page Title
Your meta description will appear hereβ¦
π± Mobile Preview
Your Page Title
Your meta description will appear hereβ¦
π‘ Optimization Tips
- Enter a title and description above to see personalized tips.
How to Optimize Your Google SERP Appearance
Your SERP listing is your first impression on potential visitors. Optimizing how your page appears in search results can dramatically improve click-through rates (CTR) even without improving your ranking position.
Title Tag Best Practices
- Keep titles under 60 characters (approximately 600 pixels wide).
- Put your primary keyword near the beginning of the title.
- Include your brand name at the end, separated by a pipe (|) or dash (β).
- Make titles compelling β use numbers, questions, or power words.
Meta Description Tips
- Aim for 150β160 characters to avoid truncation.
- Include a clear call to action (Learn, Discover, Try, Get).
- Mention your target keyword β Google bolds matching terms.
- Summarize the page's value proposition concisely.
Rich Snippets
Adding structured data (Schema.org) to your pages can unlock enhanced SERP features like FAQ dropdowns, star ratings, recipe info, and event details β making your listing stand out and increasing CTR.
Frequently Asked Questions
Enter your page title, URL, and meta description. The tool renders a pixel-accurate preview of how your listing will appear in Google search results, including desktop and mobile views, so you can optimize before publishing.
Yes. The preview is generated entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. Nothing is sent to any server, so you can safely preview titles and descriptions for unreleased pages.
Google displays approximately 50-60 characters of a title tag (or about 580 pixels wide). Titles longer than this get truncated with an ellipsis. The SERP preview shows you exactly where truncation occurs so you can keep key information visible.
Google may rewrite title tags if they are too long, stuffed with keywords, don't match the page content, or use boilerplate text. Writing concise, descriptive, and relevant titles reduces the chance of Google overriding them.
Include a clear value proposition, use action-oriented language, mention your primary keyword naturally, and stay within 150-160 characters. Avoid duplicate descriptions across pages and make each one unique to the page content.