Google SERP Preview
See exactly how your page title and meta description appear in Google search results before publishing. Check character limits and preview your snippet in real time.
Generate the link, copy it, and use it anywhere — website buttons, email signatures, social bios, or QR codes.
Enter your page details
See how your snippet looks in Google search results.
Ideal length: 50–60 characters. Google truncates longer titles.
0 / 60Ideal length: 140–160 characters. Google may rewrite if too short or irrelevant.
0 / 160The full URL of the page — used to generate the breadcrumb display.
Google snippet preview
Approximate rendering — actual display varies by device and query.
- Title: 50–60 characters — include the main keyword near the start
- Description: 140–160 characters — mention the benefit and a CTA
- URL: short, readable, hyphens not underscores
- Google bolds matching keywords in descriptions — include them naturally
Common questions about SERP snippets
A SERP preview shows how your page will look in Google search results — the clickable blue title, the green URL, and the description snippet below it.
Google typically displays the first 50–60 characters of a page title. Titles longer than 60 characters may be truncated with an ellipsis.
Aim for 140–160 characters. Longer descriptions are truncated on desktop. Google may also rewrite descriptions if they do not match the query.
Not always — Google measures by pixel width, not character count. Narrow characters like i or l take less space than wide ones like W or M.
No. Google frequently rewrites descriptions to match the search query. But a well-written description helps when Google uses yours.
Yes, and matching keywords get bolded in the results — which increases click-through rate. Include the main keyword naturally.
Keep the URL readable and relevant. Google may use breadcrumbs from your structured data instead of the raw URL.
Indirectly. Better titles and descriptions improve click-through rate, which is a ranking signal over time.
Is your entire site's metadata, structure, and indexing set up correctly?
We audit your page titles, meta descriptions, canonical URLs, structured data, sitemap, and indexing signals — then tell you exactly what to fix first.