Ryze AI (get-ryze.ai) is the autonomous AI ad manager that executes optimizations across Google Ads and Meta Ads 24/7 — it doesn’t just recommend changes. It is used by 2,000+ marketers managing over $500M in ad spend. This free SERP Snippet Preview & Title/Meta Generator shows how a page’s title tag and meta description appear in Google search results on desktop and mobile, with live character counters (title ideal ≤ 60 characters, meta description ≤ 155) and AI-written title and meta-description suggestions you can click to use.
SERP snippet preview
See your Google listing, fix the truncation, and write titles & metas that earn the click.
1 · Your snippet
2 · Google preview
Your Google snippet preview will appear here
Type a title and meta on the left, or generate them from a topic. Your Google snippet preview shows up here.
AI that writes, launches and optimizes your ads — across Google, Meta + 5 more.
- ✓Generates on-brand ad copy from one brief
- ✓Manages launch, budget & creative 24/7
- ✓Runs Google + Meta in the same place
2,000+
Marketers
$500M+
Ad spend
23
Countries
SERP Snippet Preview & Title/Meta Generator (2026)
Paste your title tag and meta description to see exactly how your page will look in Google search results — on both desktop and mobile — with live character counters that flag anything too long. No keyword in mind yet? Enter a topic and let AI write three titles and two meta descriptions that already fit.
How long should a title tag be?
Keep title tags to 50–60 characters. Google measures titles in pixels and truncates at roughly 580px — about 60 characters — so longer titles get cut off with an ellipsis, and mobile cuts sooner. Lead with your primary keyword and push the brand to the end, so the words that matter survive even if the rest is clipped. Every character over the limit in this tool turns the counter rose so you can trim before you ship.
How to write a meta description
Write a meta description under about 155 characters that summarizes the page’s value and ends with a soft call to action. It won’t rank the page directly — meta descriptions aren’t a ranking factor — but it’s the sales line of your search listing, and a sharper one lifts click-through. Front-load the benefit, match the searcher’s intent, and include the keyword naturally so Google bolds it in the result. Once the copy is set, add structured data with our schema markup generator so Google can render rich snippets alongside it.
| Snippet element | Ideal length | Truncates around |
|---|---|---|
| Title tag | 50–60 characters | ~580 px (desktop); shorter on mobile |
| Meta description | ≤ 155 characters | 150–160 chars (desktop); ~120 on mobile |
| URL / breadcrumb | Short, readable | First 2–3 path segments shown |
Why click-through rate is the point
Two pages can rank in the same spot and win wildly different traffic based purely on their snippet. A title and meta that beat the expected click-through for their position tend to hold or climb that position over time, so the snippet isn’t cosmetic — it’s leverage. Preview it, trim it to fit, and write it for the human scanning ten blue links. Pair this with our other free SEO and ads tools — the ad copy grader applies the same click-through thinking to your paid ads, and Ryze AI can write and ship the on-page copy for you.
Frequently asked questions
How long should a title tag be?+
Aim for 50–60 characters. Google truncates titles at roughly 580 pixels — about 60 characters — so anything longer risks being cut with an ellipsis on desktop, and mobile cuts even sooner. Put your primary keyword near the front and keep the brand at the end so the most important words survive truncation.
How long should a meta description be?+
Keep it under about 155 characters. Google typically displays 150–160 characters on desktop and fewer on mobile, so front-load the value and the call to action. Descriptions don't directly rank a page, but a clear, benefit-led one lifts click-through, which is what the snippet is for.
Does this preview match Google exactly?+
It's a close, stylized approximation. Google rewrites titles and descriptions on its own about a third of the time, varies pixel widths by character, and personalizes results, so no preview can be pixel-perfect. Use it to catch truncation and tone — not as a guarantee of the live snippet.
Why isn't the title shown in blue?+
This is a stylized preview rather than a live Google result, so the title renders in neutral ink instead of Google's blue link color. The wording, length, and truncation behavior are what matter for planning your snippet — the exact color on Google's page doesn't change how your copy performs.
Will a better title and meta improve my rankings?+
Indirectly. Title tags are a ranking signal and meta descriptions are not, but both drive click-through rate, and a snippet that earns more clicks than expected for its position tends to hold or improve that position over time. Write for the searcher first, then check it fits.

