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Extract meta tags & schema from any URL

Audit title tags, meta descriptions, Open Graph, Twitter cards and JSON-LD structured data — for one URL or a whole list — with character counts, actionable warnings and one-click CSV export.

Single URLs unlimitedBulk mode: 10 URLs per runJSON-LD & Open Graph includedCSV & JSON export
4.9 on the Chrome Web Store

One URL for a single check, or paste a list for bulk mode.

Auditing a whole site? Grab every URL from the XML sitemap with the Sitemap URL Extractor, then paste your sitemap URLs here to audit titles & descriptions site-wide.

How it works

01

Paste one URL or a list

Drop in a single URL for an instant, unlimited check — or paste a list, one URL per line, and the tool switches to bulk mode automatically. Free bulk runs cover 10 URLs at a time, up to 50 per day.

02

Every tag gets parsed

Each page is fetched and parsed: title and description with character counts, canonical, robots, H1s, every og: and twitter: tag, and every JSON-LD block with its schema @type — plus warnings for anything missing or over-length.

03

Inspect, then export

Scan the bulk table for amber flags, click any row to open the full detail panel with raw JSON-LD, and export the whole audit to CSV for Excel or Google Sheets — or JSON with the complete structured data.

A complete on-page meta audit — free

Character counts built in

Every title and description ships with its character count, flagged amber past 60 and 160 characters — the practical cutoffs before Google starts truncating snippets in search results.

Open Graph & Twitter cards

All og: and twitter: tags are extracted per page, with a quick ✓/✗ column in bulk mode and a missing og:image warning — so you know exactly how links will unfurl on social before you share them.

JSON-LD schema extraction

Every application/ld+json block is parsed, its @type values surfaced as badges — Product, FAQPage, Article and the rest — with @graph traversal, raw source display and explicit flags for blocks that fail to parse.

Canonical & robots checks

Canonicals are resolved to absolute URLs and classified: self-referencing, pointing elsewhere, cross-domain or missing. Robots directives are shown per page, with a hard warning whenever noindex appears.

Actionable warnings

Missing titles, over-length descriptions, absent canonicals, no og:image, multiple H1s, noindex and broken JSON-LD — each page gets a concrete warning list, not a vague score.

CSV & JSON export

One click downloads the full audit as a CSV with a UTF-8 BOM that opens cleanly in Excel and Google Sheets, or as structured JSON including every Open Graph tag and raw JSON-LD block.

What does a meta tag extractor do?

A meta tag extractor fetches a page's HTML and pulls out everything search engines and social networks read before a human ever sees the page: the title tag, the meta description, the canonical URL, robots directives, Open Graph and Twitter card tags, and JSON-LD structured data. This tool does that for one URL or a whole list, adds character counts against the practical 60/160 snippet limits, and turns the result into a warning-flagged table you can export as meta tags to CSV — so a content audit that used to mean view-source and copy-paste takes one click.

A JSON-LD extractor for the post-testing-tool era

Since Google retired its Structured Data Testing Tool, there's been no quick way to answer a simple question: what schema markup does this page actually ship? This tool works as a schema markup extractor — every application/ld+json block is parsed, its @type values (Product, FAQPage, Article, Organization and the rest, including types nested in @graph) are surfaced as badges, the raw JSON is pretty-printed for inspection, and blocks with syntax errors are flagged explicitly. That makes it easy to verify Product markup on your store, FAQ markup on your help pages, or to see exactly which schema a competitor uses to win rich results.

Bulk-audit titles and descriptions from a list of URLs

The fastest site-wide workflow starts with the free Sitemap URL Extractor: feed it your XML sitemap, copy the URLs, and paste them here to extract title and meta description from your list of URLs in batches — missing descriptions, over-length titles, stray noindex tags and absent og:image tags all show up as amber flags at a glance. Free bulk mode handles 10 URLs per run and 50 per day; for full crawls the free Ultimate Web Scraper extension has no such caps. And once the meta layer checks out, go deeper on the same pages with the Link Extractor for anchor text and broken links, or the Website to Text converter for clean body copy.

Frequently asked questions

How do I extract title tags and meta descriptions from a list of URLs?

Paste your URLs into the box, one per line (commas and spaces work too), and click Extract meta tags. The tool fetches each page in turn and pulls its title, meta description, canonical, robots, H1, Open Graph and Twitter tags, and JSON-LD — with character counts and warnings per URL. Free bulk runs cover 10 URLs at a time and 50 per day; then export everything to CSV. Single URLs are always free and unlimited.

What is JSON-LD schema markup and why would I extract it?

JSON-LD is the structured data format Google recommends for rich results — Product markup drives price and review stars, FAQPage powers FAQ dropdowns, Article feeds Top Stories. Since Google retired its old Structured Data Testing Tool, quickly seeing what markup a page actually ships has become harder. This tool extracts every JSON-LD block, shows its @type values (including inside @graph), pretty-prints the raw source and flags blocks with JSON syntax errors.

Can I export the meta tags to Excel or Google Sheets?

Yes. The CSV export includes url, title, title_length, description, description_length, canonical, robots, h1, og_title, og_description, og_image, twitter_card, schema_types and warnings columns, and ships with a UTF-8 BOM so Excel opens it with correct encoding. Google Sheets imports it directly via File → Import. There's also a JSON export with the complete structured data, raw JSON-LD included, plus a one-click clipboard copy.

What are the free limits?

Checking a single URL is free and unlimited. Bulk mode processes up to 10 URLs per run and 50 bulk URLs per day. If you paste more than 10, the first 10 are processed and you'll see exactly how many were skipped. For auditing hundreds or thousands of pages, the free Ultimate Web Scraper Chrome extension extracts meta tags — or any other on-page data — from unlimited pages without per-run or daily caps.

Does the tool render JavaScript?

No — it reads the HTML the server returns, which is also what most crawlers see on first pass. If a site injects its title, description or JSON-LD with JavaScript after load, those tags won't appear here and the tool will tell you so. The Ultimate Web Scraper extension works on the fully rendered page inside your browser, so it captures every tag exactly as you (and Google's renderer) see it.

What counts as a good title and meta description length?

There's no official character limit — Google truncates by pixel width, not characters. In practice, titles up to about 60 characters and descriptions up to about 160 usually display in full, which is why this tool flags anything longer in amber. Treat the flags as prompts to check how the snippet renders, not as hard rules: a 63-character title can be fine, but a 90-character one will almost certainly be cut off.

How do I audit meta tags across an entire website?

Combine two free tools: pull every URL from the site's XML sitemap with the Sitemap URL Extractor, then paste batches of those URLs here to extract titles, descriptions and schema. Free bulk mode covers 50 URLs per day, which suits small sites and spot checks. For full-site audits on autopilot, the Ultimate Web Scraper extension processes your entire URL list in the browser with no caps.

SEO audits shouldn't be copy-paste marathons.

The free Ultimate Web Scraper extension extracts any on-page data at scale — titles, descriptions, schema, prices, whatever the audit needs — from unlimited pages, point-and-click, right in your browser. No URL lists, no daily caps, no code.

Free forever plan · No credit card · Works on any website