Free SEO Site Checkup
Analyze any website in seconds, discover indexing issues, metadata gaps, performance bottlenecks, and structured data improvements.
HTTP Β· redirect(s)
/ points earned
Performance
Powered by Google PageSpeed Insights API
PageSpeed data unavailable for this URL
Mobile
/100
Desktop
/100
Core Web Vitals
Overall SEO Score
Issues Found
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What We Check
Enter any URL above to get a full report across all 7 SEO categories instantly.
Indexing
robots.txt Β· sitemap Β· noindex Β· canonical
Metadata
Title Β· Description Β· Open Graph Β· Twitter Card
Headings
H1 count Β· H2 structure Β· heading hierarchy
Technical
HTTPS Β· status code Β· redirects Β· canonical
Images
Alt text Β· lazy loading Β· dimensions
Structured Data
JSON-LD Β· schema types Β· rich results
Content
Word count Β· internal links Β· external links
Performance
PageSpeed Β· Core Web Vitals Β· LCP Β· CLS
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Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about SEO site checkups and best practices.
An SEO Site Checkup is an automated analysis of a website against search engine best practices. It examines technical factors (HTTPS, redirects, status codes), on-page elements (title tags, meta descriptions, headings), structured data, image optimization, content quality, and more, then generates an actionable report with prioritized recommendations.
For most websites, running an SEO audit monthly is a good cadence. After major site changes (redesigns, new pages, CMS migrations), run one immediately. High-traffic or e-commerce sites benefit from weekly checks to catch indexing or performance regressions early.
The tool itself does not change your rankings. It identifies the issues that, when fixed, can improve your rankings. Think of it as a doctor's report: the diagnosis is the first step, but the recovery happens when you apply the recommendations.
Core Web Vitals are Google's real-world speed and user experience metrics: Largest Contentful Paint (LCP, loading speed), Interaction to Next Paint (INP, responsiveness), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS, visual stability). Google uses these as ranking signals, and poor scores directly reduce your visibility in search results.
The robots.txt file tells search engine crawlers which pages they are allowed or not allowed to access. An incorrectly configured robots.txt can accidentally block your most important pages from being indexed, effectively making them invisible to search engines.
Structured data (JSON-LD / Schema.org markup) is machine-readable code that tells search engines what your content means, not just what it says. It can unlock rich results in Google: star ratings, FAQs, breadcrumbs, product prices, which dramatically increase your click-through rate from search.
An XML sitemap acts as a roadmap for search engine crawlers, listing all the pages you want indexed. It is especially important for large sites, new sites with few inbound links, or pages buried deep in the site architecture. Submitting your sitemap to Google Search Console speeds up the discovery of new and updated content.
While Google does not use meta descriptions as a direct ranking signal, they appear as the snippet text below your title in search results. A well-written meta description increases the likelihood that a user clicks your result (click-through rate), which indirectly signals relevance to Google and can improve rankings over time.