Meta Tag Bulk Analyzer for Real Estate โ Score Every Title & Description at Once
Paste a spreadsheet of URLs, title tags, and meta descriptions. geared toward dominating local property search queries and generating qualified leads.
URL, Title Tag, Meta Description - one page per line. Headers are auto-skipped.How to use this tool
- 1Prepare your data
Export title tags and meta descriptions from your CMS or crawler. Format: one page per line with URL, Title Tag, Meta Description - comma or tab separated.
- 2Paste or import
Click "Load example" to see the format, import a CSV file directly, or paste your data. Headers are auto-detected and skipped.
- 3Review and action
Sort pages by score, issue count, or URL. Click any row to see the pixel-width bar chart, full tag text, and specific fix recommendations.
How this tool helps for Real Estate sites
Meta tags are the foundation of how search engines interpret for real estate pages. This analyser checks your title tags, descriptions, Open Graph data, and canonical tags for the specific issues that hold back for real estate sites, so you can fix indexing problems before they cost you rankings.
Real estate SEO combines intense local competition with highly seasonal and location-specific search demand. Agents compete against major portal sites like Zillow and Rightmove for listing keywords while needing to establish personal brand authority in specific neighbourhoods. Neighbourhood guide content, market reports, and hyper-local landing pages are the primary weapons for organic visibility against aggregator dominance.
for Real Estate SEO tips
- Create detailed neighbourhood guides covering schools, commute times, and local amenities since these long-form pages outrank portal sites for hyper-local searches.
- Publish monthly local market reports with original data analysis because fresh statistical content earns backlinks and establishes you as the area authority.
- Optimise for "homes for sale in [neighbourhood]" with structured listing data and LocalBusiness schema rather than competing for broader city-level terms.
Why pixel width beats character count
Google measures pixels, not characters
Google's SERP rendering engine truncates titles and descriptions based on pixel width - not character count. The letter "W" is ~14px wide while "i" is ~3px. A 60-character title with many W's may truncate, while a 70-character title with thin characters may not. Character count limits are approximations; pixel width is the true constraint.
The sweet spots
Title: 460-580px (โ55-70 chars depending on characters used). Shorter than 460px wastes valuable SERP real estate. Description: 700-960px on desktop (โ120-155 chars). Below 700px you're leaving click-through opportunity on the table. Above 960px, Google trims with an ellipsis.
Why duplicates matter
Duplicate title tags confuse search engines about which page should rank for a query. They also reduce click-through rates because identical titles give users no distinguishing reason to click one result over another. This tool flags every instance of duplicate title and description text across your uploaded pages.
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