Check your title tag in characters and real pixels — measured with the same font Google uses in search results — and see exactly where Google will cut it off. Live SERP preview, desktop and mobile, plus a bulk checker for whole lists of titles. 100% in your browser — nothing is uploaded or stored.
| # | Title | Chars | Pixels | Status |
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🔒 Everything runs in your browser. Your titles are never uploaded, logged or stored.
The Title Tag Length Checker tells you whether your page title will display in full on Google or get cut off mid-sentence. Most checkers only count characters — but Google actually truncates titles by pixel width, so a title full of wide letters like W and M is cut sooner than one full of narrow letters like i and l. This tool measures your title in real pixels using the same font Google renders in search results, shows a live desktop and mobile SERP preview with the exact truncation point, and includes a bulk mode for checking an entire list of titles at once.
It is part of the SERP & Content Analysis group in our free SEO Toolkit. Pair it with the Meta Description Length Checker to size the grey text below the title, the SERP Snippet Preview to see the whole result together, the Meta Tag Analyzer to audit an existing page's tags, and the Meta Tag Generator to produce the final markup. Everything runs in your browser — your titles are never uploaded or stored.
Measured the way Google actually truncates.
Your title is measured in real pixels with Google's SERP font.
See your title exactly as it appears on desktop and mobile.
Paste a whole list of titles and grade them all in one click.
Everything is checked in your browser — nothing leaves your device.
From draft title to SERP-safe.
Paste or type the page title.
Pixels and characters update live.
See the exact truncation point.
Adjust until the status turns green.
Why pixels beat characters: both titles below are exactly 56 characters long.
A title tag length checker tells you whether the title of your page will display in full on Google's results page or be cut off with an ellipsis. The title tag is the blue clickable line in a search result — usually the single biggest on-page factor in whether someone clicks your result or a competitor's. A truncated title can lose its keyword, its brand name or its entire meaning at the exact moment a searcher is deciding where to click. This tool measures your title the way Google actually evaluates it and previews the result before you publish. It is part of the SERP & Content Analysis group in the SEO Toolkit.
The famous "60 characters" rule is only an approximation. Google truncates desktop titles at a fixed pixel width — roughly 600 pixels — and characters vary enormously in width. A lowercase "i" occupies a few pixels; a capital "W" occupies several times more. Two titles with identical character counts can have very different fates: one displays in full while the other is chopped mid-word. That is why this checker renders your title in Google's actual SERP font and measures its true pixel width, instead of guessing from a character count.
Measured with the Canvas API in Google's result-page font, not estimated.
The preview shows precisely which words survive truncation.
Mobile wraps titles over more lines at a smaller size — preview both.
Complete, readable titles consistently earn more clicks than chopped ones.
Keep the pixel width under about 580px for a comfortable safety margin below Google's ~600px desktop cut-off. In character terms that usually lands between 50 and 60 characters, but treat characters as a rough guide only. Put the primary keyword near the front, where it is both safest from truncation and most visible to a scanning searcher. Brand names belong at the end, after a separator — if anything gets trimmed, let it be the part users already know. And remember that Google sometimes rewrites titles it considers too long, stuffed or mismatched with the page, so a clean, accurate, well-sized title is also your best defence against being rewritten. Keep titles unique across the site too — the Duplicate Content Checker helps spot near-identical pages, and the Word Count & Reading Time Analyzer sizes the content behind the title.
The tool draws your title onto an invisible HTML canvas using the Arial typeface at the size Google renders desktop result titles, then reads the rendered width with the Canvas measureText API. This is the same technique professional SERP tools use, and it reflects how wide and narrow letters really differ — something character counting cannot capture.
No — Google adjusts its result layout from time to time, and the precise cut-off has shifted between roughly 580px and 620px over the years. Fonts also render slightly differently across devices. That is why this tool treats 580px as the safe zone and flags anything beyond 600px as likely truncated, rather than promising a single magic number.
Google rewrites titles it judges too long, keyword-stuffed, boilerplate or mismatched with the query — often substituting your H1 or anchor text. A concise, descriptive, honestly written title that fits the pixel limit is much less likely to be rewritten, which is exactly what this checker helps you produce.
No. Measurement, preview and bulk grading all run entirely in your browser with JavaScript, and the tool never makes a network request with your text. Nothing you type is uploaded, logged or stored, so it is safe for unreleased pages and confidential client work.
Size every title before it ships, not after rankings settle.
Bulk-check an exported list of titles from a crawl in one pass.
Compare alternative headlines and keep the one that fits.
Fit product name, attribute and brand into the visible width.
Use the Title Tag Length Checker with these tools from the SEO Toolkit: size the grey text with the Meta Description Length Checker, view the complete result with the SERP Snippet Preview, audit a live page's tags with the Meta Tag Analyzer, generate final markup with the Meta Tag Generator, check keyword balance with the Keyword Density Analyzer, and verify heading hierarchy with the Heading Structure Checker.
Anyone who writes titles that have to fit.
Everything about title tag length.
It measures your page title in both characters and true pixel width, using the same font Google renders in desktop search results, and shows a live SERP preview with the exact point where Google would cut the title off. A bulk mode grades whole lists of titles at once.
Yes, completely. There is no cost, no sign-up and no limit on how many titles you check, individually or in bulk. The tool runs entirely in your browser, so there are no server costs and nothing to pay for.
Google truncates desktop titles at a fixed pixel width of roughly 600px, and letters vary hugely in width — a capital W takes several times the space of a lowercase i. Two titles with the same character count can render very differently, so pixel measurement is the only reliable way to predict truncation.
Stay under about 580 pixels for a safe margin below Google's roughly 600px desktop cut-off — typically 50 to 60 characters, depending on the letters used. Put the primary keyword near the front and the brand name at the end, so the most important words survive even if trimming occurs.
No. Measurement, the SERP preview and bulk grading all run entirely in your browser with JavaScript, and the tool never sends your text over the network. Nothing you type is uploaded, logged or stored, so it is safe for unreleased pages and client work.
The tool renders your title on an invisible canvas in Arial at Google's desktop title size and reads the exact rendered width — the same approach professional SERP tools use. Small variations remain possible because fonts render slightly differently across devices and Google adjusts its layout over time, which is why a safety margin is built in.
Google cuts it off at the pixel limit and appends an ellipsis, which can remove your keyword, your brand or the meaning of the headline. Overly long titles are also more likely to be rewritten by Google entirely. The preview on this page shows you exactly which words would survive.
Yes. Switch the preview to mobile to see your title at mobile size, where Google wraps titles over more lines and usually displays slightly more characters than desktop. A title that passes the desktop pixel check will almost always display fully on mobile as well.
Yes. Paste a list of titles, one per line, into the bulk checker and every title is graded for characters, pixel width and status in a single click. You can copy the whole report — useful when auditing titles exported from a site crawl or a content spreadsheet.
Google rewrites titles it considers too long, keyword-stuffed, repeated across pages or mismatched with the content, often using your H1 instead. Writing a concise, accurate title that fits within the pixel limit is the best way to keep the title you wrote in the results.
Yes. The checker is fully responsive, so you can test titles from a phone or tablet. Typing, the live meters, the SERP preview toggle and the bulk checker all work the same as on desktop.
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Measure your titles in real pixels, preview the exact truncation point on desktop and mobile, and bulk-check whole lists — free, private and instant in your browser.
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