TextPulses

Browser-side checker

SEO Title Checker

The SEO Title Checker helps you review a page title before it becomes the promise shown in search results, browser tabs, and shared links. It checks length, clarity, repetition, and whether the important topic appears early enough to be understood quickly. The goal is not to chase a magic number or guarantee ranking. It is to make the title specific, readable, and aligned with the actual page. Paste a title, compare the Publish Readiness Report, then rewrite anything that sounds padded, duplicated, or vague. This is especially useful when several pages target similar topics and each title needs a clear reason to exist.

Live analyzer

Count, clean, and check fit before you publish

Privacy-first: your text stays in your browser.

Ready for private browser-based analysis.

Unique tool

PublishFit Score

Choose a channel and TextPulses checks length, clarity, readability, keyword balance, and publication readiness using transparent browser-side rules.

Score

0

Needs improvement
Current length
0 characters
Recommended limit
Ideal: 40-60 characters. Warning above 65.

Clarity

Needs work

0/100

Keyword density

Needs work

0/100

Readability

Needs work

0/100

Publication readiness

Needs work

0/100

Actionable recommendations

  • Paste or write text to generate channel-specific recommendations.

Browser-side report

Publish Readiness Report

Publish Readiness Report
Main issue detected: Clarity needs the most attention
Best channel fit: SEO Title
Length risk: Needs improvement
Readability risk: Needs work
Keyword repetition risk: Needs work
Sentence flow risk: Needs work
Scanability risk: Needs work
3 practical edits to improve this draft:
1. Paste or write text to generate channel-specific recommendations.
Final pre-publish checklist: clear purpose; useful structure; cautious claims; natural repetition; human review complete.
Disclaimer: estimates are practical signals, not guarantees.

No backend, no external AI, and no draft upload. The report is generated locally in your browser.

Writing Health

Rule-based quality signals

Scores use simple, transparent rules. They are helpful signals, not editorial verdicts.

Clarity Score

0

Variety Score

0

Keyword Balance

0

Sentence Flow

0

Readability

0

PublishFit

0

Warnings to review

  • Add text to generate writing health scores.

Keyword density

Top words and phrase frequency

Stop words are ignored for one-word density so repeated meaningful terms stand out faster.

One-word phrases

Add more text to see phrase frequency.

Two-word phrases

Add more text to see phrase frequency.

Three-word phrases

Add more text to see phrase frequency.

What this checker helps you decide

  • Whether the title is concise enough for scanning.
  • Whether the main topic appears early.
  • Whether repeated terms make the title look forced.

How to use this tool

  1. Paste one candidate title at a time.
  2. Select or keep the SEO Title preset and review the character count.
  3. Check whether the main entity, page type, and reader task appear without keyword stacking.
  4. Rewrite the title and compare the report before publishing.

Practical examples

A guide title for a new article.
A SaaS feature page title.
A local service page title.
A comparison page title.

Common mistakes

  • Repeating the same keyword twice.
  • Starting with a vague brand claim.
  • Using a title that does not match the page.
  • Making every page title follow the same template.

Final checklist

  • Keep the topic early.
  • Remove filler adjectives.
  • Make the page type clear.
  • Avoid duplicate titles.
  • Check the methodology note before relying on limits.

FAQ

What title length should I aim for?

A practical range is often around 40 to 60 characters, but clarity and page match matter more than a fixed number.

Can this predict Google truncation?

No. Search display can vary by query, device, and pixel width. The checker gives practical risk signals, not a display guarantee.

Should I include my brand in every title?

Use the brand when it helps recognition or trust. Avoid adding it mechanically when it makes many titles look duplicated.

How do I avoid keyword stuffing in a title?

Use the primary topic once, then add audience, format, location, or benefit only when it clarifies the page.

Related resources

Estimates are practical signals, not guarantees.