Free tool

Google SERP preview

See how your page will look in Google before it goes live.

Enter a URL or paste title and description manually.

Why SERP preview matters

Our SERP preview shows what your link will look like in Google search results — before you push the page live. You enter a URL, Title, and Meta Description, and the tool renders an exact preview for both mobile and desktop, including the truncation Google applies when a title is too long. This is essential for SEO because the click-through rate from a result to your site depends almost entirely on how compelling the listing looks.

When should you use it?

Every time you write a new article, before publishing. When upgrading an existing article that ranks on page two and you want to lift its CTR. When designing category or product pages with dynamic Titles. And as a quick check on competitors — to see how they phrase their Title and Description. The tool supports Hebrew and English, and shows length in pixels (not just characters), because pixels are what Google actually measures.

How to read the preview

The tool shows three fields: the URL as it will appear, the Title as it will appear (blue, bold), and the Meta Description (gray paragraph). If your text overflows, it is marked red and truncation appears as ellipsis (…). Optimal targets: Title 50–60 characters (~580 pixels), Description 140–160 characters. Use your primary keyword once in each — naturally, not as keyword stuffing.

Title and Meta mistakes

What we see often: Title starts with the brand instead of the keyword (hurts CTR); descriptions identical across many pages; Title disconnected from the page content (Google rewrites it and ignores yours); titles ending mid-sentence due to truncation; and use of words Google auto-filters like "the best" or "newest" when not relevant. The tool flags all of these before the page goes live.

After you have a final draft

Update the Title and Meta in your WordPress editor (in the SEO plugin's panel). If you manage multiple sites, Rank+ has a full SEO panel inside the editor with the same preview built in — automatic length checking, keyword repetition detection, and a one-click "generate Meta from content" if you want to save time on routine articles.

Before and after examples

Before: "Rank+ — The All-In-One SEO and Automation Platform for WordPress | Everything you need to rank in one place" — 110 characters, truncated to "Rank+ — The All-In-One SEO and Automation Platform for…". After: "WordPress SEO Platform — Automated Ranking | Rank+" — 50 characters, displays in full, leads with the keyword. CTR moved from 1.8% to 3.4%. Second example — Meta Description: before: "We provide a comprehensive solution for all your needs, from SEO to AI-powered content generation and intelligent automation, all in one place." (149 chars, generic). After: "WordPress SEO platform that runs itself: technical SEO, automatic Meta, AI articles, performance monitoring. No commitment." (122 chars, specific, action-oriented) — CTR up 41%.