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Title Tag Checker

Audit title tags for missing values, duplicate wording, length and pixel truncation risk, and keyword coverage consistency.

Last reviewed: June 11, 2026

About this tool

Validate title tag exports before publishing so missing titles, duplicate copy, and truncation-prone strings do not weaken click-through and topical relevance signals.

The Title Tag Checker audits your page titles for length, uniqueness, keyword placement, and SERP truncation risk. It processes bulk URL exports and flags titles that are missing, duplicated across pages, or likely to be rewritten by Google due to poor relevance or excessive length.

  • Parses URL rows in URL|title format and normalizes relative links with an optional base URL.
  • Flags missing titles, duplicate title text, short and long title ranges, and desktop or mobile truncation risk.
  • Supports tracked keyword lists so teams can spot title rows missing expected topic terms.

How to use Title Checker

Paste or upload a list of URLs with their title tags. The checker evaluates each title against pixel-width thresholds for desktop and mobile, detects duplicate clusters, and highlights rows where the primary keyword appears too late or is missing entirely.

When this tool is useful

  • QA title-tag exports before a launch, migration, or CMS template rollout.
  • Detect duplicate or missing titles across URL inventories before indexing signals split.
  • Prioritize rewrites for rows likely to truncate on desktop or mobile snippets.

Practical tips

  • Treat pixel limits as guidance and keep the primary topic phrase near the beginning of each title.
  • Avoid repeating identical title templates across many URLs unless they are intentionally equivalent pages.
  • Review keyword coverage in title rows, but keep wording readable and specific to user intent.

Examples you can test

These examples show the kind of real input and reviewed output this tool is designed to support. Use them as a starting point before pasting your own production content, then compare the output with the destination system that will use the result. The goal is not only to produce a value, but to make the input assumptions, output format, and review step clear enough that the result can be trusted in a real workflow.

Check a short title

Example input

<title>Tools</title>

Expected output

Warning that the title may be too generic

A title should identify the page clearly enough for users scanning search results or browser tabs.

Review a long title

Example input

Very long product title with repeated keywords and brand terms

Expected output

Length and readability warning

Long titles can be rewritten or truncated, so clarity matters more than stuffing terms.

Validation checklist

Run through these checks before copying the result into a CMS, codebase, spreadsheet, campaign, support ticket, or production document. Small formatting differences, unit assumptions, hidden whitespace, and platform-specific rules are common sources of mistakes in quick browser tools, so the final review should happen in the same context where the output will be used.

  • Use one clear title tag per page.
  • Match the title to the visible page topic.
  • Avoid repeated keywords or generic labels that do not distinguish the page.

Why people use this tool

The title tag remains the single most influential on-page ranking element and the primary text users see in search results. Titles that truncate mid-phrase, duplicate other pages, or bury the topic keyword reduce both click-through rates and crawl relevance signals.

Related search intents

title tag checker, seo title checker, meta title length checker, title tag audit tool.

Frequently asked questions

What input format does this title checker expect?

Use one row per page in URL|title format. Relative URLs are resolved using the base URL field.

Does the tool use only character count?

No. It checks both character count and estimated pixel width so you can catch likely truncation issues that simple character limits miss.

What pixel width does the checker use to estimate Google SERP truncation?

The checker uses a 580-pixel width threshold, which reflects Google's current desktop SERP title display limit. Titles exceeding this width are flagged with the estimated truncation point.

Does the tool detect duplicate title tags across multiple pages?

Yes. When you input title tags from multiple pages, the tool groups exact and near-duplicate titles together and highlights them so you can differentiate pages that share identical or overly similar titles.

How does the keyword coverage check work?

You can provide a target keyword for each URL, and the tool verifies whether that keyword appears in the title tag, flags titles missing the keyword, and notes if the keyword is buried near the end where it may be truncated.

Review and privacy notes

Utiloom reviews tool pages for practical examples, validation checks, browser-side processing notes, and clear limitations before they are promoted in search. Read more about the editorial approach on the About page, check data handling in the Privacy Policy, or contact us if a tool needs correction.

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