Meta & OG Tag Generator
Fill in your page fields — get a ready block of meta tags: SEO, Open Graph, and Twitter Card. On the right you see how the card looks in search and when shared. Copy and paste into your <head>.
Why Open Graph tags matter. When a page link is dropped into a messenger or social network, it pulls the title, description, and image from the Open Graph tags in your <head>. Without them you get a bare URL instead of a nice card. Twitter Card does the same for Twitter/X. These tags do not directly affect search rankings, but they greatly boost click-through when shared. The recommended image size is 1200×630 pixels.
FAQ
What image size for Open Graph?
1200×630 pixels (1.91:1 ratio) is optimal — the card shows a large image across all networks. Minimum 600×315; below 200×200 the image may not load at all.
How is og:title different from the regular title?
The <title> tag is used in search and the browser tab, while og:title appears on the share card. They often match, but og:title can be made more click-worthy for social without touching the SEO title.
Do I need separate Twitter tags if I have Open Graph?
Twitter/X reads Open Graph too, so you can get by without twitter: tags at a minimum. But twitter:card sets the card type (summary_large_image for a big image) and twitter:site/creator attach the account — worth adding.
Why does the network show an old image?
Networks cache Open Graph for a long time. After changing tags, run the link through the platform debugger (Facebook Sharing Debugger, Twitter Card Validator) — it refreshes the cache and shows what was pulled.
A free online generator of meta tags, Open Graph, and Twitter Card. Fill in the title, description, URL, and image — the tool builds a ready block of tags to paste into your <head>, and shows a live preview of the card as it appears in Google search, when shared on Facebook, and on Twitter/X.
All key fields are supported: og:title, og:description, og:image, og:url, og:type, og:site_name, og:locale, twitter:card, twitter:site, theme-color, and the standard SEO tags. The preview updates live, so you see the result before publishing. The recommended 1200×630 image size is hinted right in the interface.
Everything runs in the browser; nothing is sent to a server. The tool is handy for web developers, SEO specialists, and content managers — to quickly assemble correct social markup and make sure the page card looks attractive when shared.