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Generate HTML meta tags for SEO, Open Graph, and Twitter Cards. Enter your page details and copy the output directly into your HTML head.
Fill in your page title, description, URL, and an optional preview image, and the generator produces ready-to-paste HTML: standard meta tags for search engines, Open Graph tags for Facebook and LinkedIn, and Twitter Card tags for X. You see a live preview of the output as you type, so you can check length and wording before committing.
Copy the generated block into the <head> of your page — every page on your site should have its own unique title and description. If your site is server-rendered or statically generated (see SSR), crawlers and social platforms will pick the tags up without any extra work.
Your title and meta description are the ad copy of your search listing. Google uses the title as the clickable headline and often shows the description underneath, so they directly influence whether someone clicks your result or the one below it. That makes them one of the highest-leverage pieces of on-page SEO you control.
Open Graph and Twitter Card tags do the same job for social sharing: without them, a shared link renders as a bare URL or grabs an arbitrary image; with them, it shows the title, description, and image you chose. Platform choice affects how easy this is to manage — our comparison of Next.js vs WordPress covers the SEO trade-offs in more depth.
Keep titles under roughly 60 characters and descriptions under roughly 160 characters. Google truncates longer text in search results, cutting off mid-sentence. Front-load the important words: the page topic and, for titles, your brand name at the end.
No. Google has ignored the meta keywords tag since 2009, and other major search engines followed. There is no need to include it. Spend the effort on a clear title and a description that makes someone want to click instead.
Open Graph tags are meta tags (og:title, og:description, og:image, og:url) that control how a page looks when shared on social platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Slack. They do not affect search rankings directly, but they make shared links look deliberate rather than broken, which affects how often people click them.
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