On-Page & Meta
On-Page & Meta
Live

Title Tag Optimizer

Generate title-tag variants tuned for CTR and target queries.

Inputs

Enter your title and target keyword — or fetch a page to use its current title.

44 chars · 0 px
Good

Score

Aggregate of length, keyword position, and CTR signals.

100
Contains a number — boosts CTR+4
Click-friendly modifier present+4

Variant ideas

Template-based starting points — adapt to your voice.

225px
279px
351px
324px
396px
279px

Start here · What is a title tag?

A title tag is the page title search engines read from your HTML. It is often the blue link people click in Google, and it also appears in browser tabs and social previews.

Good title tags help both search engines and humans understand the page quickly. They usually include the main query, a clear promise, and sometimes the brand.

The trick is balance: too vague and people skip it; too stuffed and it looks spammy. This tool helps you compare cleaner options before you ship.

When to use this tool

  • New page launch

    Use it when a blog post, product page, or landing page is ready and you need a title that matches the target keyword.

  • CTR refresh

    Use it when Search Console shows impressions but weak clicks. A clearer title can improve traffic without changing the full page.

  • Editorial review

    Generate several safe variants so writers, SEOs, and stakeholders can pick a title based on intent instead of taste.

Examples

Walk through these with the form above — they are practice scenarios, not live data.

Service page title

Try this

Keyword: technical SEO audit. Page type: service page. Brand: Northstar SEO.

What to look for

Look for a variant that keeps the keyword near the front and leaves room for a benefit like Fix Crawl & Indexing Issues.

Blog post rewrite

Try this

Keyword: best free SEO tools. Current title: Our Favorite Tools for Marketing Teams.

What to look for

The stronger versions should make the search intent obvious while avoiding clickbait that the article cannot satisfy.

Short tutorial

Follow in order the first time you use the tool; later you can skip to the step you need.

  1. Step 1 - Add the target keyword

    Use the query you actually want the page to rank for. If you are unsure, use the phrase from your brief or Search Console.

  2. Step 2 - Add page context

    Mention the page type, audience, brand, and any must-keep wording. More context usually means less generic output.

  3. Step 3 - Compare intent and length

    Pick the title that tells the truth fastest. Do not choose the longest title just because it includes more keywords.

More detail

New here? Skim Start here first, then run one Examples scenario in the form above.

Title Tag Optimizer does one job: generate title-tag variants tuned for CTR and target queries. It lives under On-Page & Meta on SEOToolkits, where the beginner idea is simple: On-page SEO covers the visible and HTML signals on one page, including titles, headings, canonicals, and meta tags.

FAQ

How long should a title tag be?
A common practical target is about 50-60 characters, but Google truncates by pixel width, not character count. Put the most important words early.
Should the brand go in every title tag?
Use the brand when it adds trust or recognition. For long informational titles, the brand may be better at the end or omitted if space is tight.
Can I use the same title tag on multiple pages?
Avoid duplicates on important pages. Unique titles help search engines understand which URL answers which query.

Same workflow cluster on SEOToolkits — open another module without leaving context.