Meta Tag Generator

Generate SEO title, description, canonical, Open Graph, and Twitter card tags for any page.

Meta Tag Generator

Draft basic SEO, Open Graph, and Twitter/X tags for a page.

Result

<title>Free Online Tools for Faster Work</title>
<meta name="description" content="Use simple browser-based tools for marketing, writing, development, and business tasks.">
<link rel="canonical" href="https://example.com">
<meta property="og:type" content="website">
<meta property="og:title" content="Free Online Tools for Faster Work">
<meta property="og:description" content="Use simple browser-based tools for marketing, writing, development, and business tasks.">
<meta property="og:url" content="https://example.com">
<meta property="og:image" content="https://example.com/og-image.png">
<meta name="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image">
<meta name="twitter:title" content="Free Online Tools for Faster Work">
<meta name="twitter:description" content="Use simple browser-based tools for marketing, writing, development, and business tasks.">
<meta name="twitter:image" content="https://example.com/og-image.png">

What the tool does

The Meta Tag Generator creates common HTML tags for search and social previews. It includes a title tag, meta description, canonical link, Open Graph tags, and Twitter card tags. These tags help search engines and social platforms understand how a page should be described and displayed.

The tool is useful for blog posts, landing pages, product pages, tool pages, documentation, and any page that needs a clean preview when shared.

How it works

Enter the page title, description, canonical URL, image URL, and Open Graph type. The generator places those values into copyable HTML tags. You can paste the tags into your page head or adapt them for your framework.

The generator creates structure, but you should still edit the wording. Good metadata should match the actual page and make a clear promise to the searcher.

When to use it

Use this tool before publishing a new page or refreshing an old one. It is especially useful when improving pages that have vague titles, missing descriptions, weak social previews, or inconsistent canonical URLs.

For copywriting help, read how to write meta descriptions. For URL paths, use the slug generator.

Benefits

Good metadata improves clarity. A strong title tells people what the page is. A useful description explains why it is worth opening. Open Graph and Twitter tags make shared links look more complete in social feeds and messaging apps.

Using a generator also prevents missing tags. It is easy to forget image or canonical tags when moving quickly.

Examples

For a tool page, the title might be "UTM Builder - Free Campaign URL Builder". The description might say, "Create clean UTM tracking URLs for email, paid ads, social campaigns, and partner links." The canonical URL should point to the final public page.

Before copying the generated tags into production, preview the title and description next to competing results or similar pages on your own site. If several pages sound identical, rewrite them. Metadata should help each page stand on its own while staying accurate to the content.

A good review pass checks three places together: the visible H1, the browser title, and the meta description. If those three elements tell a consistent story, the page is usually easier for both readers and search systems to interpret.

Also check the social image URL. A broken or unrelated image can make an otherwise strong page look unfinished when someone shares it in a message, community, or social feed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do meta descriptions directly improve rankings? They are not a magic ranking lever, but they can improve how your page appears and how clearly it matches intent.

How long should a title be? Keep it concise and put the most important words early.

Should every page have a canonical URL? Important indexable pages usually should.

What image size should I use for social previews? A wide image around 1200 by 630 pixels is a common choice.

Can I use the same metadata on many pages? Avoid duplicate titles and descriptions. Each important page should describe its unique value.

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