Free Web Page SEO Checker
The basics still matter a ton for SEO and AIO these days. Search engines and AI tools are looking for proper hierarchy and formatting in order to crawl and surface your content. While the steps for proper on-page SEO are often overlooked, the good news is that they’re easy, low-hanging fruit you can fix quickly.
Get a fast read on your pages’ SEO fundamentals.
Paste a URL (your homepage, service pages, landing pages, blog posts, or other). This tool checks one page at a time, but you can use it as many times as needed.
One quick SEO check, lasting improvement
My free web page SEO checker takes a look at on-page SEO signals to give you top priorities for optimizing your content. Use it with your highest-value landing pages and blog posts for quick SEO improvements.
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Check your meta title and description to see if they’re the proper length for search engines.
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Ensure you’re using proper headers so search and AI engines can better identify your content.
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Determine if your word count is too short or long compared to similar pages.
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See if your images are missing alt text and update them for accessibility and SEO.
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Assess how many links you have to your own site and external sources–there should be a healthy mix for blog posts and a good amount of internal linking on your landing pages.
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Based on the page audit, discover your high-priority fixes that can improve your SEO today.
FAQs
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My SEO checker simply scrapes your site to gather a list of on-page SEO details. It doesn’t interfere with your site’s crawl budget or need back-end access to work.
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I recommend using the SEO checker on your highest-value pages, like sales pages or blog posts that are almost ranking on page one. Once you see the priority fixes, make sure to use the insights to update your pages. As you update and add other pages to your website, consider the same SEO checks for best practice.
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Yes! You can use the SEO checker on any web page, including posts. You can even use it on lead gen tools, microsites, guides, and more. As long as it has a URL (and isn’t a PDF or other type of document), the checker will work.