Title Tag

A page's <title>, shown as the clickable result headline. One of the strongest on-page relevance signals — keep it unique.

The title tag is the <title> element in a page's head. It's shown as the clickable headline in search results and in the browser tab, and it remains one of the strongest on-page signals a search engine uses to understand what a page is about.

A good title is specific, front-loads the primary topic, reads naturally, and stays around 50-60 characters so it isn't truncated in results. Google may rewrite a title it finds unhelpful — too long, too vague, or keyword-stuffed — so writing a clear title in the first place keeps you in control of how the result reads.

Every indexable page needs a unique title. When many pages share a near-identical title, they compete with each other and read as templated, and it becomes a symptom of keyword cannibalization or thin, duplicated content.


Related terms

  • Keyword Cannibalization — When several pages on one site target the same query and compete with each other, splitting signals and confusing engines.
  • Meta Description — A page's summary tag. Not a ranking factor, but it often becomes the search snippet, so it drives click-through.
  • SEO (Search Engine Optimization) — The practice of earning more relevant traffic from search engines by making a site easier to crawl, index, understand and trust.
  • Structured Data (Schema Markup) — Machine-readable markup (usually JSON-LD) that labels page content so engines can understand it and show rich results.