Meta Tag Generator

Fill in the fields below. Preview how your page looks on Google, Facebook, and Twitter — then copy the HTML.

Basic SEO

Social / Open Graph

Recommended: 1200×630px

Technical

Google Preview

https://example.com
Page Title
Meta description will appear here...

Facebook Preview

OG Image Preview
example.com
Page Title
Meta description...

Twitter Preview

Card Image
Page Title
Meta description...
🔗 example.com

Generated HTML


                

Frequently Asked Questions

What meta tags should every webpage have?

Every webpage should have: a <title> tag (50–60 characters), a meta description (150–160 characters), a canonical link, and Open Graph tags (og:title, og:description, og:image, og:url) for social sharing. A Twitter Card meta tag improves how your page appears when shared on Twitter/X. The meta viewport tag is essential for mobile responsiveness.

Does Google still use the meta keywords tag?

No. Google officially stopped using the meta keywords tag for ranking in 2009. It was abandoned because webmasters abused it with keyword stuffing. However, Bing and Yandex still factor it into their rankings to a minor degree. The most impactful SEO elements are the page title, meta description, heading structure, page content quality, and page load speed.

How long should my meta title and description be?

Google displays approximately 50–60 characters for page titles and 150–160 characters for meta descriptions in search results before truncating with "...". Staying within these limits ensures your full title and description are visible. Bing is slightly more generous. For Open Graph, titles up to 95 characters work well on Facebook; descriptions can be up to 200 characters.

What are Open Graph tags and why do they matter?

Open Graph (OG) tags were created by Facebook and are now used by all major social networks including LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Telegram, and Slack to generate link previews. When someone shares your URL, the og:title, og:description, and og:image tags control what image and text appear in the preview card. Without these tags, platforms will guess at the content, often with poor results.

What image size should I use for the og:image tag?

The recommended og:image size is 1200×630 pixels (approximately 1.91:1 aspect ratio). This displays well on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter/X. Use PNG or JPG format and keep the file size under 1MB. For Twitter's "summary_large_image" card, the same 1200×630 dimension applies. Images smaller than 600×315 will be displayed as small thumbnails rather than large cards.