Website SEO Score & Optimization Tool — analyze on-page SEO instantly.
What it does
The SEO Analyzer inspects a page’s on-page SEO signals — title, meta description, headings, images, structured data,
links, and keyword signals — and produces an actionable score and prioritized recommendations.
Key Features
- Title & meta length checks
- Heading structure & H1 audit
- Image alt & missing alt checks
- Keyword density & word count
- Canonical, robots & structured data detection
Analysis Report
Real-World Use Cases
- SEO audits for blog posts before publishing
- Technical checks during migrations
- Marketing teams reviewing landing pages
- Freelancers preparing site optimization reports for clients
Benefits
- Quick, actionable recommendations
- Improves discoverability and CTR
- Reduces manual checklist work
- Portable copyable reports for sharing
FAQ
A: No — this is a single-page on-page analyzer. For full site audits use a crawler or run this tool per page.
Q2: What if fetching a URL fails?
A: Many servers block cross-origin requests. Paste the HTML source into the box to analyze the page locally.
Q3: Is the score definitive?
A: The score is a heuristic based on common on-page signals. Use it as a guide, not an absolute ranking.
Q4: Are recommendations SEO best-practices?
A: Yes — they follow widely accepted on-page SEO guidance, but prioritize based on your goals and audience.
Q5: Can I analyze dynamic or scripted content?
A: If content is rendered client-side (JavaScript), fetch may return pre-rendered HTML and miss content. Best: paste the final HTML or use server-side rendering snapshots.
Disclaimer: This tool provides automated analysis and suggestions for on-page SEO only. It does not replace a full technical SEO audit, manual review, or professional SEO advice. Accuracy depends on provided HTML or accessible URL. Use recommendations at your own discretion.
What Is an SEO Analyzer?
An SEO analyzer is a tool that helps you understand how well your website is set up to appear in search engines like Google. Think of it as a health check for your site’s visibility. It scans your pages and points out what’s working well and what needs improvement.
On-Page SEO Basics
On-page SEO refers to the elements you control directly on your website. This includes your page titles, meta descriptions, headings, and the actual content. A good analyzer shows whether these are clear, relevant, and optimized for the keywords you want to rank for.
Why Meta Tags Matter
Meta tags are short snippets of text that describe your page. Search engines use them to understand your content, and users often see them in search results. If your meta tags are missing or poorly written, people may skip your site even if it shows up.
Why Headings Matter
Headings (like H1, H2, H3) organize your content. They make it easier for readers to scan and for search engines to understand the structure of your page. A strong heading strategy signals that your content is clear and valuable.
Why Technical Signals Matter
Beyond words, search engines look at technical signals: page speed, mobile-friendliness, and secure connections (HTTPS). If your site is slow or hard to use on phones, rankings can drop.
Why Small SEO Issues Reduce Rankings
Even small problems—like broken links or duplicate content—can add up. Search engines want to show the best results, so fixing these issues helps your site stay competitive.
An SEO analyzer does not guarantee higher rankings, but it helps identify areas that may be limiting your performance. Regular audits allow you to fix issues early and maintain a technically healthy website over time.
👉 How to Read Your SEO Analyzer Report
When you run an SEO analyzer, you’ll get a detailed report about your website’s performance. At first glance, it may look technical, but it’s really a guide to help you understand how search engines see your site. Here’s how to make sense of it:
1. Overall Score
The score (like 62/100) is a quick summary of your site’s SEO health. A higher score means fewer issues.
As a general guideline:
- 80–100: Strong optimization with minor improvements needed
- 50–79: Moderate optimization with clear areas to fix
- Below 50: Significant improvements recommended
This helps you quickly see whether your site is in good shape or needs more attention.
2. Titles and Meta Descriptions
Your title and meta description are what people see in search results. If the title is too long or the description too short, search engines may not display them properly. Aim for clear, descriptive text that tells visitors what your page is about.
3. Headings
Headings (H1, H2, H3, etc.) organize your content. The report shows how many you have. Ideally, you should have one main H1 per page, with H2s and H3s breaking content into sections. Too many H1s can confuse search engines.
4. Images
The analyzer checks if your images have “alt text.” Alt text describes the image for search engines and helps visually impaired users. If some images are missing alt text, add short, descriptive phrases.
5. Links
You’ll see how many links your page has. Internal links connect your pages together, while external links point to other sites. Both are useful, but too many can feel cluttered.
6. Technical Signals
Reports often highlight technical details like structured data, canonical tags, or mobile-friendliness. These signals help search engines understand your site and prevent duplicate content issues.
7. Word Count and Keywords
The report may show how many words are on the page and whether a primary keyword is detected. Without a clear keyword focus, search engines may struggle to know your topic.
8. Suggestions
Finally, the report lists prioritized fixes. For example, “add alt text to images” is a simple step that improves accessibility and search visibility.
Common On-Page SEO Mistakes This Tool Detects
Understanding what the analyzer flags helps you fix issues faster. These are the most frequently detected problems across websites of all sizes:
Missing or duplicate title tags — Every page on your site needs a unique title tag between 50–60 characters. Titles that are too short waste ranking potential. Titles that are too long get truncated in search results, cutting off your message before users finish reading it.
Poorly written meta descriptions — Meta descriptions do not directly affect rankings but they heavily influence click-through rate. A missing meta description means Google writes one for you — usually pulling random text from the page that may not be compelling. Aim for 150–160 characters that clearly describe the page and include a reason to click.
Multiple H1 tags — Each page should have exactly one H1 tag that clearly states the page topic. Multiple H1s confuse search engines about the primary subject of the page. H2s and H3s can be used freely to organize supporting sections.
Images without alt text — Alt text serves two purposes: it describes images to visually impaired users using screen readers, and it tells search engines what the image depicts. Missing alt text on product images, infographics, or illustrative photos is a common missed opportunity for both accessibility and image search visibility.
Thin content — Pages with fewer than 300 words of meaningful content are frequently flagged as low-value by search engines. If a page exists primarily as a tool or form with minimal surrounding explanation, adding contextual content around it significantly improves its standing.
Missing canonical tags — If the same content is accessible at multiple URLs — for example with and without trailing slashes, or via HTTP and HTTPS — search engines may index both versions as duplicate content, splitting their ranking strength. A canonical tag tells Google which version is the authoritative one.
No structured data — Schema markup helps search engines understand your content well enough to display rich results — star ratings, FAQs, how-to steps, and other enhanced search features. Most pages have no schema at all, which is a missed opportunity for improved visibility.
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