What is Article to SEO Meta?
Article to SEO Meta turns a finished article — or a solid draft — into ready-to-use SEO title and meta description variations, each sized to the lengths Google actually displays (roughly 50 to 60 characters for the title, 150 to 160 for the description). Paste your text, optionally name a primary keyword, and get one to three options to drop straight into your CMS. Because it reads the whole piece, the metadata reflects what the article is really about rather than a generic guess.
Who is Article to SEO Meta for?
Bloggers, content marketers, and SEO specialists who need title tags and meta descriptions that fit Google's limits and read well, without hand-counting characters. Site owners and freelancers use it to backfill missing metadata across old posts, and writers use it to get a strong first draft of a title and description the moment a piece is finished.
How to use it
- Paste your article, or a near-final draft.
- Optionally add the primary keyword you want to rank for.
- Choose how many variations you'd like (one to three) and generate.
- Check the live character counts, then copy the title, the description, or both.
What makes a good title tag and meta description
- Title tag — specific, front-loads the main keyword, and stays around 50 to 60 characters so it isn't cut off. Google explains how it builds the title link shown in results.
- Meta description — reads like ad copy for the page: summarize the value in 150 to 160 characters, work in the keyword naturally, and give a reason to click. See Google's snippet documentation.
- Unique per page — every page deserves its own title and description; duplicates confuse search engines and waste the chance to match different queries.
Do meta tags still matter for SEO?
The meta description isn't a direct ranking factor, but it heavily influences click-through rate — and a page that earns more clicks from search tends to perform better over time. The title tag does carry ranking weight and is often the first thing a searcher reads. Tight, compelling metadata is one of the cheapest SEO wins available.
Built with ADK-TS, free, and private
This tool is powered by Google's Gemini through ADK-TS, the open-source TypeScript agent framework. If you'd like to build something similar, our guide walks through building your first AI agent in TypeScript with ADK-TS. The tool itself is free with a daily limit and no account; add your own free Google AI Studio key for unlimited runs. Your article is sent to the model only to generate the metadata for that request — it isn't stored on our servers or used to train anything.