New · AI-Powered · Free

Generate Click-Worthy Title Tags & Meta Descriptions Free

AI-powered. Platform-specific instructions for WordPress, Shopify, Wix and more. No sign-up. No fluff.

Here's what you'll get
  • titleSave 12+ Hours/Week with AI SEO Audits (Free)
  • titleStop Guessing: Real Meta Tag Pixel Widths
  • metaFree AI meta tag generator with platform-specific paste instructions for WordPress, Shopify, Wix and more. No sign-up. Get started in under a minute.

↑ Sample output. Paste a URL above and we'll do this for your real page.

What this tool does

Most free meta generators output text and abandon you. We do six things differently — each one designed to save you the 15 minutes per page that title/meta work usually takes.

5 titles, 5 different angles

Benefit, problem, how-to, curiosity, local — never paraphrases. Pick the one that fits your page.

Pixel-perfect length scoring

Real Arial pixel measurement against Google's SERP truncation point — not a misleading character count.

Live SERP preview

See exactly how your picked combination will render in Google before you commit.

Platform-specific instructions

Step-by-step "where to paste it" for WordPress (Yoast / Rank Math / AIOSEO), Shopify, Wix, Squarespace, Webflow, Ghost, Astro, raw HTML.

Critique of your current copy

When you fetch a URL, the AI grades what you already have so you can see the gap.

Outrank-competitor mode

Paste a competitor URL — the AI generates differentiated angles that won't look identical to theirs.

Why pixel width beats character count

Open any other free title-tag tool and it will tell you "your title is 58 characters — perfect." That advice is wrong about a third of the time, because Google does not truncate by character count. Google truncates by pixel width, and the difference between the two is the reason so many "perfect-length" titles end with an ellipsis on the live SERP.

The reason is the font. Google's SERP uses Arial, and Arial — like almost every proportional font — renders each character at a different width. A capital "W" or "M" takes about 17 pixels at the SERP title size. A lowercase "i" or "l" takes just 4 pixels. So "WWW Marketing Solutions" (24 characters) is wider than "illuminating insights for life" (32 characters), even though it is shorter on a character count.

Google's effective cutoff is about 580 pixels safe / 600 pixels hard for titles, and about 920 pixels safe / 990 pixels hard for meta descriptions on desktop. Mobile is tighter still. Every variant generated by this tool is measured in real Arial pixels — green if it fits comfortably, amber if it is close to the line, red if it will be truncated. That is the bar a character-counter cannot match.

Title tag best practices for 2026

1. Put the primary keyword in the first 60% of the title

Google still weights early keyword placement when evaluating relevance, and users skimming a SERP scan left-to-right. A keyword that appears in the final five words of a 60-character title is both algorithmically weaker and easier for the eye to miss. Front-loading is one of the cheapest wins available.

2. Match search intent, not just keywords

A title is a contract with the searcher: this page answers your query. If a user searches "best CRM for freelancers" and your title is "Acme CRM — Enterprise Sales Software," you've broken the contract before they click. Match the intent — informational, transactional, comparison — that the keyword implies, even when the keyword itself fits the page perfectly.

3. Use the meta description for what the title cannot say

The title is the headline; the meta is the deck. Use the meta to add the specific number, benefit or differentiator that did not fit in the title. "Free 14-day trial," "Trusted by 4,000 UK businesses," "Read in 3 minutes" — concrete claims are what drive the click. Generic promotional language ("the leading solution for…") is almost always worse than silence.

4. End the meta with a soft CTA verb

Discover, learn, see, get, compare, try. Soft action verbs at the end of a meta lift CTR measurably without crossing into clickbait. Avoid "click here" (Google docks it) and avoid question marks unless your title is also a question.

5. Treat brand inclusion as a choice, not a rule

For homepages and About pages, including your brand in the title is usually right — it is the page about you. For service and product pages, leading with the user benefit and putting brand at the end (or omitting it) often performs better, because pixel real-estate is finite and your brand name competes with the searcher's intent for space.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Google sometimes rewrite my title?

Google rewrites titles when its algorithm decides yours is too long, generic, keyword-stuffed, or a poor match for the search query. Studies put the rewrite rate at 60% across the web. A well-targeted, pixel-correct title — exactly what this tool produces — is rewritten far less often because Google sees no reason to change something already aligned with the query and within the SERP layout.

Why pixel width and not character count?

Google's SERP truncates titles at ~600 pixels and meta descriptions at ~990 pixels — not at a character count. Wide letters like W and M take ~9 px each at Google's title size, while narrow letters like i and l take just 2–3 px. A 60-character title full of M and W will get cut off; a 65-character title full of i and l will fit. This tool measures actual pixel width so you avoid the truncation ellipsis.

Is this tool really free? What's the catch?

Genuinely free, no sign-up. We pay for it because a useful free tool means people who eventually contact us about consultancy arrive better informed — smarter conversations are worth more to us than harvested emails. Daily AI generations are capped by Google's free tier (1,500 a day total across all users). When that runs out we tell you and offer a free consultation instead.

Does the meta description affect rankings?

No — Google has confirmed meta descriptions are not a direct ranking factor. But they heavily influence click-through rate, and CTR is a ranking signal in its own right (especially for a query you already rank for). A compelling meta beats a generic one even if both contain your keyword, because it earns the click.

What if I paste the title into the wrong field in WordPress?

The most common mistake is pasting the SEO title into the post-title field (the big input at the top of the editor). That field is the H1 / post title — what shows on the page itself. The SEO title is a separate field inside the Yoast / Rank Math / All in One SEO box below the content area. Our platform guide tells you exactly which field to use for your CMS.

Can I use this for non-English pages?

The tool will run, but the AI is optimised for English and the pixel-width calculator uses Arial-Latin character measurements. For CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) the pixel estimate is conservative — actual SERP width may differ. Latin-script European languages (Spanish, French, German, etc.) produce accurate output; the generator just outputs in English by default.

How is this different from the SERP Preview tool?

The SERP Preview tool lets you eyeball a title/meta you've already written to see how it looks in Google. This tool generates 5 fresh variants for you across different angles (benefit, problem, how-to, curiosity, local), scores them, and tells you which CMS field to paste the winner into. Use this one when you don't yet have copy you're happy with.

What model is the AI? Why Gemini?

Google's gemini-2.0-flash, called server-side from our Vercel function. We use Flash (not Pro) because Flash is fast (~1–2 s), free at the volumes we run, and equally good at short structured outputs like titles and metas. Pro is 30× more expensive per token and the quality gap on short copy is negligible.

Do you store my URL, copy, or any results?

The generation runs server-side and the result is returned to your browser only. We don't write anything to a database, and we don't log the request body. The newsletter form on the results page is the only place we capture data, and only if you choose to enter your email.

Will the AI write something that gets me a Google penalty?

No — the model is prompted to avoid keyword-stuffing, clickbait, and misleading promises (which are what trigger penalties). It produces natural-sounding copy with the primary keyword used once, the way Google has guided since 2014. The bigger risk is your own edits: avoid all-caps, exclamation marks in titles, and emoji unless your brand explicitly uses them.

Other Free SEO Tools

Content Brief Generator

Need a full content outline — not just the title? Ahrefs-level brief in 30 seconds.

Open tool →

SERP Preview

Already have a title and meta? Eyeball it against the real Google layout.

Open tool →

Social Preview Tester

Same title and meta — but how does it look on X, LinkedIn, Facebook, Discord?

Open tool →

Need this done across your whole site?

Doing one page is fast. Doing 200 pages with keyword research, intent mapping and a SERP-strategy memo is a project — and it is exactly what the consultancy does. Free 30-minute call to see if we are a fit.

Book a Free Consultation