Website SEO Score Checker
Free SEO Report tool to audit any web page, score on-page and technical SEO, and get prioritized fixes to improve rankings.
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The SEO Report tool analyzes any web page and hands you a clear SEO score plus a prioritized list of exactly what's helping and hurting your rankings — and how to fix each issue. Instead of guessing why a page underperforms, you get a concrete, actionable checklist in seconds. Enter a URL and start improving. Free, with no signup.
Stop Guessing, Start Fixing
Most pages underperform for reasons you can't see at a glance: a missing meta description, a broken link, a slow load, an accidental noindex tag. An SEO report surfaces these hidden problems and turns them into a to-do list, so your optimization effort goes exactly where it counts instead of into guesswork.
How to Use It
- Enter your URL.
- Run the report to scan and score your page.
- Fix the issues, starting with the critical ones, then re-check.
What the Report Checks
| Category | What's analyzed |
|---|---|
| On-page SEO | Title tag, meta description, H1–H6 structure, keyword usage, alt text, internal links |
| Technical SEO | Crawlability, indexability, status codes, redirects, canonical tags, structured data |
| Content | Length, quality signals, duplicate or thin content |
| Performance | Page speed and mobile-friendliness |
How the Score Works
Your page is graded on how closely it follows SEO best practices, usually on a 0–100 scale. It starts from a high baseline, and each issue found subtracts from the total — a missing tag here, a broken link there. The result is a single number that summarizes overall SEO health at a glance, while the detailed report shows precisely which factors raised or lowered it.
Fix the Critical Issues First
Not all issues are equal, and the report ranks them for you. Critical problems — anything that blocks crawling or indexing, broken links, missing core tags — come before minor warnings. Fixing the highest-impact items first delivers the fastest, most measurable improvement, which is why prioritized reporting beats a flat list of every tiny imperfection.
The Issues Reports Catch Most
- Meta problems — missing, duplicate, or poorly sized titles and descriptions.
- Heading issues — missing H1, multiple H1s, or broken hierarchy.
- Missing alt text — images search engines can't understand.
- Broken links & redirects — dead ends and redirect chains.
- Indexing blocks — pages accidentally hidden from search engines.
An Honest Word on What a Report Can Do
Be realistic about the goal. An SEO report makes your page's foundation technically excellent and fully crawlable — necessary, but not the whole story. Rankings also depend on genuinely useful content, matching search intent, earning backlinks, and out-competing rivals. Treat the report as the launchpad: fix the issues to remove what's holding you back, then let great content and authority carry the page upward.
Audit Yourself and Your Competitors
Run the report on your own pages to find quick wins, and on competitors' pages to see how their titles, headings, and content are structured — useful for understanding why they rank and where you can do better. Re-run it after each round of fixes, and at least monthly on key pages, to track progress and catch new issues before they cost you traffic.
SEO Report FAQs
What does an SEO report check?
A thorough report examines on-page SEO (title tags, meta descriptions, heading structure, keyword usage, image alt text, internal links), technical SEO (crawlability, indexability, status codes, redirects, canonical tags, structured data), content quality, and often performance signals like page speed and mobile-friendliness. It then scores your page and lists the issues holding it back, with fixes for each.
How is the SEO score calculated?
The score reflects how well your page follows SEO best practices, typically on a 0–100 scale. A page starts from a high baseline, and points come off for each issue found — a missing meta description, a broken link, a slow load. The more (and more severe) the issues, the lower the score, so the number is a quick summary of your page's overall SEO health.
Which issues should I fix first?
Always start with the critical, high-impact issues — the report flags these, often in red. Problems that block search engines from crawling or indexing your page, broken links, and missing core tags outweigh minor warnings. Fixing the highest-impact items first delivers the fastest, most measurable gains; tackle the smaller warnings afterward.
What are the most common SEO issues found?
Frequently: missing or duplicate title tags and meta descriptions, missing or multiple H1 headings, images without alt text, broken links and redirect chains, thin or duplicate content, missing structured data, slow page speed, and pages accidentally blocked from indexing. Most sites have a handful of these, and fixing them often produces quick wins.
How often should I run an SEO report?
Run one after making significant changes to a page, and at least monthly for your important pages. SEO isn't a one-time fix — search engines update, content ages, and links break, so regular checks catch problems before they erode your rankings. Many site owners audit key pages monthly and the whole site quarterly.
Can I analyze my competitors with it?
Yes. Running the report on a competitor's page shows how their on-page SEO is structured — their titles, headings, and content approach — which helps you spot what they do well and where you can do better. It's a practical way to reverse-engineer why a competing page ranks and to set realistic targets.
Will fixing every issue guarantee top rankings?
No, and it's important to be realistic. An SEO report fixes the on-page and technical foundation, which is necessary but not sufficient. Rankings also depend on content quality, search intent match, backlinks, and competition. Think of the report as making your page technically excellent and crawlable — the launchpad on top of which great content and authority do the rest.
Is the SEO report tool free?
Yes, it's free to analyze a page and get your score with prioritized recommendations. Use it to audit your own pages, study competitors, and track improvements as you fix issues over time.