What Is a Title Tag?
A title tag is an HTML element in the <head> section that defines the page title. It appears as the clickable heading in search results, in browser tabs, and when shared on social media — making it one of the most important HTML elements for SEO.
Why Do Title Tags Matter?
Title tags are one of the few elements Google officially recognizes as a ranking factor. Setting an appropriate title tag alone can improve both search rankings and click-through rates.
20%+
Average CTR increase with optimized title tags
50-60
Recommended character count for English
33%
Percentage of titles rewritten by Google
Optimal Title Tag Length
| Language | Recommended | Max Display |
|---|---|---|
| Japanese | 25〜35 chars | ~35 chars |
| English | 50〜60 chars | ~60 chars |
| Mobile | Slightly shorter is better | ~30 chars |
Google's display width is about 600 pixels. Full-width characters take roughly twice the space of half-width characters, which is why Japanese titles are shorter. Count total characters including separators and brand names.
How to Write Effective Title Tags
Place keywords at the front
Search engines give more weight to keywords near the beginning of the title. Users also decide whether to click based on the first few characters, so put your most important keyword first.
Accurately represent the page content
Mismatched titles and content cause Google to rewrite your title. When user expectations don't match reality, bounce rates increase.
Add brand name at the end with a '|' separator
The format 'Page Title | Brand Name' is standard. Placing the brand name first reduces the importance of your target keywords.
Include numbers and specifics
'7 SEO Strategies' gets more clicks than 'SEO Strategies'. Specific numbers, years, and step counts catch the eye.
Set a unique title for every page
Using the same title across multiple pages confuses search engines about which page to show. Every page should have its own unique title.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Keyword stuffing
Listing keywords like 'SEO Check SEO Tool SEO Audit SEO Checker' is flagged as spam by Google and hurts rankings. One to two primary keywords per title is appropriate.
Title is too long
Titles exceeding 60 characters (English) get truncated with '...' in search results. This not only cuts off your message but also triggers Google to rewrite the title entirely.
Same title on every page
Some CMS default to showing only the site name as the title on every page. Set a unique, content-specific title for each page.
Clickbait (content mismatch)
Exaggerated titles designed to farm clicks increase bounce rates and hurt SEO. Your title should accurately reflect the page content.
Good vs. Bad Examples
→ Keyword stuffing. Unclear what the page is about, and risks being flagged as spam by Google.
→ Too vague to convey any content. No keywords included.
→ Keywords upfront, specific numbers and value proposition included, brand name at the end.