Generate 5 SEO-optimized title tags in seconds. AI-written, 50-60 chars, varied formats.
Uses GPT-4o-mini to generate titles that follow proven CTR-boosting patterns.
Every suggestion fits Google's display limit so it never gets truncated in SERPs.
Number list, how-to, question, ultimate guide, and year-tagged — pick what matches your content.
Get all 5 titles in 3-5 seconds. Regenerate as many times as you need.
Choose Professional, Casual, Bold, or Question style to match your brand voice.
No credit card. 5 free generations per hour. Sign up if you need more.
The title tag is the single biggest on-page CTR lever you have. Google rewrites about 60% of titles based on a 2026 Ahrefs study, but the version it picks is almost always derived from your original — so a strong starting title gives you the best shot at a strong displayed title.
A well-written title does three jobs at once: it includes the primary keyword (ranking signal), it pitches the user a clear benefit (CTR signal), and it fits within ~60 characters so it doesn't get truncated in SERPs. Most pages fail at one of these three. AI-generated suggestions help you cover all three in seconds.
Once your titles are dialed in, the next bottleneck is indexing — even the perfect title is worthless if Google never crawls the page. Use IndexFlow's Bulk Index Checker to verify your URLs are actually indexed and discoverable.
Google truncates titles longer than ~60 characters in search results, replacing them with an ellipsis. Truncated titles lose CTR because users can't see the full value proposition. The 50-60 char sweet spot ensures full display on both desktop and mobile SERPs.
Number-list titles (e.g. '7 Ways to...') and how-to titles consistently outperform plain descriptive titles by 15-30% according to Backlinko data. Questions work best for informational queries. Year-tagged titles ('...in 2026') signal freshness for time-sensitive topics.
Yes for branded searches and homepages, no for blog posts targeting unbranded keywords. If you include it, put it at the end with a separator: '| BrandName' or '— BrandName'. Keep brand name short (under 15 chars) so it doesn't eat into title real estate.
Random generators just shuffle templates. This uses GPT-4o-mini to actually understand your topic and write contextually relevant titles. Each suggestion includes the right keywords, follows SERP best practices, and sounds natural — not template-stuffed.
Yes — though they're optimized for SEO (clarity + keyword in first 30 chars), they work well as Facebook/LinkedIn post hooks too. For Google Ads, you may want shorter variants (under 30 chars per headline).