See exactly how your title and meta description will appear in Google search β with real pixel-width limits for desktop and mobile, so nothing gets truncated. Live preview as you type. 100% in your browser β nothing is uploaded or stored.
Tip: titles truncate around 580px on desktop and descriptions around 920px. Check both views, then build the final tags with the Meta Tag Generator.
π Everything runs in your browser. Your input is never uploaded, logged or stored.
The SERP Snippet Preview shows how your page's title and meta description will look in Google search results before you publish. It measures your text in real pixels β not just characters β and shows separate desktop and mobile views, so you can see exactly where Google would truncate your snippet and fix it in advance.
It belongs to the SERP & Content Analysis group of our free SEO Toolkit, alongside the Title Tag Length Checker and Meta Description Length Checker. Once your snippet looks right, generate the final tags with the Meta Tag Generator and audit a live page with the Meta Tag Analyzer. Everything runs in your browser β your input is never uploaded or stored.
Real pixel-width measurement, desktop and mobile, live as you type.
Watch a realistic Google result update instantly as you edit your title, description and URL.
Truncation is calculated by pixel width, the way Google really cuts snippets β not by character count.
Switch between desktop and mobile views, which have different widths and truncation points.
Clear status messages tell you when a title or description is too long, too short, or just right.
From draft to a click-worthy snippet in under a minute.
Type your title tag, meta description and page URL into the form.
A realistic Google result appears, with pixel meters tracking your length.
Toggle desktop and mobile to see where each would truncate your snippet.
Adjust until the status is green, then create the tags with the Meta Tag Generator.
A realistic Google result, rendered live from your text.
A SERP snippet is the block Google shows for your page in search results β the clickable blue title, the green or grey URL, and the grey description beneath it. Because searchers decide whether to click based on this snippet, getting it right is one of the highest-impact things you can do for organic traffic. This tool previews that snippet using real pixel-width measurement, so you see what Google will actually display. It is part of the SERP & Content Analysis group.
Google truncates titles and descriptions by pixel width, not character count. A title full of wide letters like W and M takes more space than one full of narrow letters like i and l, even at the same character count. That is why a 60-character title can fit in one case and get cut in another. This tool measures the rendered width of your exact text, giving a far more accurate cut-off point than a simple character counter.
| Element | Desktop Limit | Mobile Limit | Rough Characters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Title tag | ~580 px | ~920 px | ~50β60 |
| Meta description | ~920 px | ~1300 px | ~150β160 |
These limits are approximate β Google adjusts them over time and may rewrite snippets β but staying within them keeps your key message visible.
A clear, complete snippet earns more clicks from the same ranking position.
Keep your call to action visible instead of cut off mid-sentence with an ellipsis.
Front-load your most important words so they show even if the snippet is shortened.
Check the mobile view, where most searches happen and widths differ from desktop.
The tool measures your text with a canvas using a font close to Google's display font. This is far more accurate than character counting, but exact rendering varies slightly by device, browser and Google's current layout, so treat the limits as reliable guidance rather than an exact pixel guarantee.
Google sometimes rewrites titles and descriptions to better match a search query, pulling text from the page instead of your tags. You cannot fully control this, but a clear, relevant title and description make Google more likely to use yours.
No. Google shows a date before the description for some results, often news and blog posts, and not for others. The optional date toggle lets you see how a prefix would affect the space available for your description.
No. The preview is rendered locally in your browser with JavaScript. Nothing you type is uploaded, logged or stored, so the tool is safe for unpublished pages and confidential client content.
Craft titles and descriptions that fit and entice before publishing each article.
Ensure product names and key selling points are not cut off in results.
Preview and approve client snippets quickly before they go live.
Test existing titles and descriptions to find ones that truncate or underperform.
Use the SERP Snippet Preview with these tools from the SEO Toolkit: measure length precisely with the Title Tag Length Checker and Meta Description Length Checker, build the final tags with the Meta Tag Generator, audit a live page with the Meta Tag Analyzer, check keyword focus with the Keyword Density Analyzer, and improve clarity with the Readability Scorer.
Anyone who wants more clicks from their search listings.
Everything about previewing your Google search snippet.
It shows how your page's title, URL and meta description will appear in Google search results. It measures your text by pixel width and offers desktop and mobile views, so you can see exactly where Google would truncate your snippet and adjust it before publishing.
Yes, completely. There is no cost, no sign-up and no limit on how many snippets you preview. The tool runs entirely in your browser, so there are no server costs and nothing to pay for.
Google truncates snippets by pixel width, not character count. Wide letters take more space than narrow ones, so two titles of equal length can truncate differently. Measuring pixels gives a far more accurate cut-off point than counting characters alone.
Yes. All processing happens locally in your browser with JavaScript. Nothing you type β titles, descriptions or URLs β is uploaded, logged or stored. This makes the tool safe for unpublished pages and confidential client work.
Titles fit best at about 50β60 characters, roughly 580 pixels on desktop, and descriptions at about 120β160 characters, around 920 pixels. The pixel meters and status messages in the tool flag anything that runs too long or too short.
Google may rewrite a title or description to better match a search query, drawing text from your page instead of your tags. You cannot fully control this, but writing a clear, relevant title and description makes Google more likely to use yours.
It is very close, using pixel measurement with a font similar to Google's, but exact rendering varies by device, browser and Google's current layout. Treat the limits as reliable guidance rather than a guaranteed pixel-perfect match.
Google shows a date before the description for some results, such as news and blog posts. The toggle lets you preview how that prefix reduces the space available for your description, so you can plan around it.
Yes. Most searches happen on mobile, and mobile snippets have different widths and truncation points than desktop. Checking both views ensures your key message stays visible wherever your audience searches.
Yes. Paste the current title and description of any live page to see whether they truncate or could be improved. It is a quick way to find underperforming snippets during a site audit.
Yes. The preview tool is fully responsive, so you can check snippets from a phone or tablet. Entering text and switching between desktop and mobile previews work the same as on desktop.
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See exactly how your page appears in Google β desktop and mobile, with real pixel limits. Free, private and instant.
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