Ranking & SEO

Analyze meta tags, headings, Open Graph, structured data and technical SEO indicators.

What is the SEO & Ranking Analyzer?

The SEO Analyzer examines the technical SEO factors of a page: meta tags, headings, Open Graph, structured data, canonical URLs, robots directives and other indicators. Within seconds you get a score and a detailed report on everything that needs improvement.

Which factors does it check?

  • Title tag: Is it present? Does it have an appropriate length (50–60 characters)?
  • Meta description: Is it present? Is it between 120–160 characters?
  • Headings (H1–H6): Is there a single H1? Does it follow a logical hierarchy?
  • Open Graph: Does it have og:title, og:description, og:image for social sharing?
  • Canonical URL: Does it avoid duplicate content?
  • Robots meta: Is there no noindex directive blocking crawling?
  • Structured Data (Schema.org): Are there JSON-LD or microdata markup for rich results?

How do I interpret the score?

The overall score is calculated as the percentage of checks that pass. Above 80% = a solid SEO foundation. 50–80% = improvements are needed. Below 50% = serious issues affecting your ranking.

Does this replace a full SEO audit?

No. This tool checks technical on-page indicators. A full SEO audit also includes backlink analysis, page speed, mobile-friendliness, Core Web Vitals, internal linking and keyword strategy — elements that require specialised tools.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my page have a good score but doesn't appear in Google?
On-page SEO is only one factor. Google also considers: backlinks, page speed, mobile experience, Core Web Vitals, domain authority, domain age and content quality. Also check whether the page is indexed (site:yourdomain.com in Google).
What is Open Graph and why does it matter?
Open Graph (og:title, og:image, etc.) controls how your page appears when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter/X. Good og: tags increase click-throughs from social media.
What is Structured Data / Schema.org?
It is metadata in JSON-LD or microdata format that helps search engines understand your content. It can lead to "rich results" (review stars, FAQ, breadcrumbs) that significantly increase CTR.
How important is the canonical URL?
Very important if you have duplicate content (e.g. http vs https, www vs non-www, or URLs with parameters). The canonical tag tells Google which version is the "primary" one and prevents SEO juice from being split across multiple URLs.