Google SERP Snippet Emulator

Preview and optimize your webpage's Title, Description, and URL for Google search results. Check character counts and estimated pixel widths. See how your page might appear on Google.

SERP Content
Enter the Title, Description, and URL for your page.
46 / 60 Chars
~0 / 580 Pixels
140 / 160 Chars
~0 / 920 Pixels
JSON-LD Schema (Optional)
Paste your `<script type="application/ld+json'>` content here to preview rich snippets.

Supports basic Product (Price, Rating), FAQ, and Rating snippets.

Live Preview
Approximate Google SERP snippet.
example.com › your-page
Example Title - Catchy & Relevant | Brand Name

This is an example meta description. It should be compelling and informative, encouraging users to click, ideally around 150-160 characters.

This is an example meta description. It should be compelling and informative, encouraging users to click, ideally around 150-160 characters.

About Google SERP Snippet Emulator

Your title and meta description are the ad copy for your page — they're what people read in search results before they decide whether to click. But Google doesn't truncate them by character count; it truncates by pixel width, which is why a title that fits in your CMS can still get cut off in the wild.

This emulator renders your title, description, and URL the way they'd appear in a Google result, and shows both the character count and an estimated pixel width for each field. As you type, you can see exactly where Google is likely to clip your text and adjust before it ships.

Use it to tighten titles that run long, write descriptions that lead with the part that matters, and confirm your URL reads cleanly in the snippet. Everything renders in your browser as you type — nothing you enter is uploaded or stored.

How to use Google SERP Snippet Emulator

  1. Enter your title tag

    Type the page title you plan to use. The preview updates live with the character count and estimated pixel width.

  2. Add the meta description

    Write the description that should appear under the title. Watch the width estimate to keep it from being truncated.

  3. Set the URL

    Enter the page URL so the snippet shows the full result, including the path Google displays.

  4. Tune for the cut-off

    Adjust the title and description until the most important words sit before the point where Google is likely to truncate.

Frequently asked questions