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Web Tool

Web Page Analyzer

Analyse any webpage on-page SEO at a glance — meta tags, heading structure, word count, image alt text, canonical tags, Open Graph, robots directives and more.

🏷 Meta & OG tags📊 Heading structure🖼 Image alt audit⚡ Instant analysis
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Checks: Meta tags · Heading structure · Word count · Alt text · Open Graph · Canonical · Robots

📚How to Use Web Page Analyzer

  1. 1
    Enter a URL

    Type or paste the full URL of the webpage you want to analyse, including https://. Press Analyse and the tool begins scanning the page source for all on-page SEO and technical signals.

  2. 2
    Review the full report

    The report is broken into clear sections: Meta Information (title, description, keywords, robots, canonical), Heading Structure (H1-H6 hierarchy), Content Signals (word count), Image Audit (missing alt text), and Social Tags (Open Graph, Twitter Card).

  3. 3
    Fix issues and re-analyse

    Each flagged issue includes a clear explanation of what is wrong and how to fix it. Make your changes, then re-run the analyser to confirm everything passes.

💡Quick Reference

SignalOptimal Value
Meta title length50–60 characters
Meta description length120–160 characters
H1 countExactly 1
Image alt text100% coverage
Canonical tagSelf-referencing

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Web Page Analyzer check?

The analyser inspects the full on-page SEO profile of any URL: meta title length and presence, meta description, robots meta tag, canonical tag, H1-H6 heading hierarchy, word count, image alt attributes, Open Graph tags, Twitter Card tags, lang attribute, charset declaration, and viewport meta tag.

Why is the meta title length important?

Google typically displays 50-60 characters of a meta title in search results. Titles longer than 60 characters are truncated with an ellipsis, which can hurt click-through rates. Titles shorter than 30 characters waste valuable keyword real estate. The analyser highlights the character count and flags titles outside the optimal range.

What is a canonical tag and why does it matter?

A canonical tag tells search engines which version of a page is the definitive one, preventing duplicate content issues from diluting your rankings. For example, two URLs with the same content can have a canonical tag consolidating their ranking signals into one URL.

Why should every image have an alt attribute?

Alt attributes describe an image to search engine crawlers and to visually impaired users using screen readers. Missing alt text means search engines cannot understand or index your images for image search. Descriptive, keyword-rich alt text is a low-effort, high-impact SEO win.

What is the heading structure check?

Search engines use H1-H6 heading tags to understand the structure and topic hierarchy of a page. Best practice is to have exactly one H1 tag as the main topic, followed by logically nested H2 and H3 tags for subtopics. The analyser shows all headings, flags missing or duplicate H1 tags, and identifies broken heading hierarchies.

What are Open Graph tags and why do they matter?

Open Graph tags control how your page looks when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp and other social platforms. Without them, social networks use unpredictable fallbacks. The analyser checks for all required og:title, og:description and og:image tags.

What does robots noindex mean?

A robots meta tag with content equal to noindex tells search engines not to include this page in their index. If this tag is present unintentionally — for example after a staging site deployment — it can cause your page to disappear from search results. The analyser prominently flags any noindex directives it finds.

Does the tool check page speed or Core Web Vitals?

This tool focuses on on-page SEO signals in the HTML source — meta tags, headings, images and structured markup. For page speed and Core Web Vitals, use Google PageSpeed Insights which measures real-world performance metrics.

Can I use this tool to audit competitor pages?

Yes — you can enter any public URL, including competitor pages. This lets you quickly see their meta title and description strategy, heading structure, word count targets, alt text practices and which Open Graph image they feature when shared on social media.

How often should I re-analyse my pages?

Run a page analysis whenever you publish or significantly update content, after any CMS or theme update, before and after a site migration, and whenever you notice a ranking drop for a page. Monthly audits of your top landing pages is a solid maintenance baseline.