Generate 3 click-worthy meta descriptions in seconds. AI-written, 140-160 chars, action verb hooks.
GPT-4o-mini writes natural, human-sounding descriptions — not template-stuffed garbage.
Every description fits Google's display limit so it never gets truncated in SERPs.
Starts with Discover, Learn, Get, Find — proven CTR boosters that pull users in.
Choose blog post, product, landing page, category, or homepage — get a fitting description style.
Optionally pass a target keyword and the AI will weave it naturally into the description.
No credit card. 5 free generations per hour. Sign up if you need more.
Your meta description is the elevator pitch Google shows below your title in search results. It's 160 characters of sales copy that decides whether a searcher clicks you or your competitor — and unlike paid ads, you don't pay for the impression. Strong descriptions can lift CTR by 30-50% on the same ranking position.
The best meta descriptions do four things in 160 characters: lead with an action verb, name the user's problem or desired outcome, include the target keyword naturally (so Google bolds it), and end with a specific benefit or call to action. Skip the corporate fluff — every word has to earn its slot.
Once your descriptions are dialed in, the rest of the funnel matters too. Make sure the page is actually getting indexed using IndexFlow's Bulk Index Checker — a perfect description on an unindexed URL is worth zero clicks.
140-160 characters is the sweet spot. Under 140 wastes valuable SERP real estate; over 160 gets truncated with an ellipsis on desktop. Mobile shows ~120 chars, so put your most important benefit in the first 120 characters as a safety net.
Not directly — Google confirmed meta descriptions are not a ranking factor. But they massively affect CTR (click-through rate), which IS a ranking factor. A great description on a #5 result can outperform a weak description on a #2 result by attracting more clicks.
Google rewrites about 70% of meta descriptions according to a 2026 Portent study, usually because your description doesn't match the user's specific query. The fix: write descriptions that target the page's core topic, include relevant keywords naturally, and provide a clear value proposition. Strong descriptions get used more often.
Generally no — your brand already shows in the green URL line below the title. Save those characters for the value pitch. Exception: homepages and branded landing pages where brand recognition is part of the conversion goal.
Discover, Learn, Get, Find, Build, Compare, Try, Save are top-performers. Avoid weak verbs (Read, See, Look) and overused phrases ('cutting-edge', 'best-in-class'). The first 3 words determine whether someone keeps reading the description or scrolls past.