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SEO audit

Paste a public page link below for a quick on-page check. You get a simple score plus notes on title, meta description, headings, images, and links so you can fix issues before Google sees a messy page.

About this free SEO audit tool

Many people run a small blog, a shop, or a company site and they want Google to show their pages when someone searches. That is where a basic on-page check helps. You do not need paid software for the first pass. You only need a clear list of what is wrong on one page and what you can fix today. This tool reads the public HTML of a URL you give and points out common issues like missing title, weak meta description, broken heading order, images without alt text, and a few link checks. It is meant for quick sanity checks before you spend money on bigger audits.

What we look at on your page

Search engines still use simple signals from your HTML. The page title and meta description are what users often see in the results, so they should match the topic and not be empty. Headings should follow a sensible order so both users and crawlers know what the main topic is. Images should carry alt text where it makes sense, not keyword stuffing, just a short line that says what the image is for. Links should work and not send people to dead pages. Our audit bundles these checks into one report with a score so you can see how far you are from a clean baseline. It is not magic and it does not promise rankings, but it saves time when you are editing many pages by hand.

Why small fixes matter

A lot of site owners in India fix speed and design first, which is fine, but they forget the basics on each URL. One missing title or a duplicate meta line across the whole site can confuse Google about which page to show. When you fix those items page by page, you give clearer signals. You also help people who share your link on WhatsApp or social media because the preview text comes from title and description. The audit is a simple way to catch those slips before you publish or before you ask an agency to take over. Even ten minutes on the worst pages can lift the overall quality of the site.

How to use the report

Start with the highest severity items if the tool shows them. Rewrite the title in plain language under sixty characters where possible. Write a meta description that reads like a short invite, not a list of keywords. Open the page in your editor or CMS and apply the changes, then run the audit again on the same URL to confirm. If you manage a template, fix the template once instead of every single post. Keep a small note of what you changed so your team does not undo it later. If the score is already high, focus on content depth and internal links next, because tools cannot measure everything that helps rank.

Who will find this useful

Freelancers who maintain client sites can paste staging or live URLs before handover. In-house marketing teams can share one link with developers and say here is the list. Students who are learning SEO can see real output on example domains and compare with their own project. Shop owners on Shopify or WooCommerce can check product pages the same way as blog posts. The only need is that the URL is public and returns HTML we can fetch. Logged-in areas and pages that block bots may not give full results, so keep that in mind when you test.

Limits you should know

This audit looks at one URL at a time. It does not replace a full site crawl, server log review, or backlink study. If your site loads most text with JavaScript after the first response, what we see may differ from what you see in Chrome after scripts run. Core Web Vitals, mobile layout, and local map pack are separate topics. Treat the score as a guide for on-page hygiene, not a school mark. When in doubt, compare with Search Console data for the same URL and fix what Google already flags there too.

Indexing and getting found

Fixing on-page issues does not mean Google will index you the next hour. Submit important URLs in Search Console, keep sitemap updated, and avoid blocking CSS or JS that changes how the page reads. Use clean internal links so crawlers discover new posts. If you copy content from other sites, no tool will save you from duplicate issues, so publish original work. For local shops, add clear address and service area text where it fits. Over time, steady small improvements beat one big rush once a year.

BookMyMark and free tools

BookMyMark hosts this checker along with other free helpers like meta tag and sitemap tools. You can move between them from the tools page when you need a different job done. If this audit helps you ship better pages, share the link with your team so everyone checks before publish. We keep the flow simple on purpose so you spend less time clicking and more time fixing real issues on your site.