See How Your Website May Appear in Search Results

Google SERP Simulator

Need help visualizing how your keyword targeting will look in search engine results pages? Check out my FREE Google SERP simulator that tracks character counts, pixels, gives a preview, and also allows you to see how it would look if rich snippets appeared in SERPs from your structured date. 

Google SERP Simulator Tool
Free SEO Tool

Google SERP Simulator

Preview exactly how your title tag and meta description will look in Google search results — before you publish. Truncation is measured against real rendered pixel width, the same way Google actually cuts it off.

Add your review count and rating to see what a review rich result looks like in SERPs!
Rating (0–5)
Review Count

Live Preview

local seo guide
PREVIEW
All
Images
Videos
News
Shopping
More

About 1,240,000 results (0.42 seconds)

example.com https://www.example.com › blog › local-seo-guide

Note: Google's actual truncation points shift over time and vary slightly by query and device — these limits reflect Google's current typical behavior, not a guarantee. Star ratings are rounded to the nearest whole star for display and only appear in real SERPs if your page has valid AggregateRating schema markup. The grayed-out blocks below your result are placeholders representing the rest of the results page — this tool only simulates your listing, it doesn't fetch live search data.

How It Works

How the SERP Simulator Works

1

Enter Your Title, Description & URL

Type in the title tag, meta description, and destination URL exactly as they’ll appear on the live page — no need to publish anything first.

2

Watch Google Render It Live

See pixel-accurate truncation update as you type, styled like an actual results page — chars and px counters flip from green to pink the moment you go over budget.

3

Fine-Tune Until It Fits

Trim the copy, check it against both desktop and mobile limits, and optionally add a star rating to preview what a review rich result would look like.

Why This Tool

Built to Actually Work, Not Just Exist

Pixel-Accurate Truncation

Measured against real rendered pixel width, not a rough character count, so you see the exact cutoff point Google actually uses.

Desktop + Mobile Preview

Toggle between desktop and mobile instantly, since Google truncates titles and descriptions differently on each.

Review Rich Result Preview

Add a star rating and review count to preview what a review rich result looks like before you ever touch AggregateRating schema.

No Email Gate, No Server

Runs entirely in your browser. No signup, no data collected, nothing sent anywhere.

Ready to Stop Guessing How Your Listings Look?

A SERP simulator shows you the snippet. Getting it to rank — and earning the click once it’s there — is a different skill set entirely. That’s where strategy, not just tools, starts to matter.


Let’s Talk Goals

Questions

SERP Simulator FAQ

Are these pixel limits exactly what Google uses?+

Google doesn’t publish exact numbers, and truncation points shift over time and vary slightly by query and device. The limits here reflect Google’s current typical behavior, a reliable practical target, not a guaranteed cutoff.

Does adding a star rating here make it show up in real Google results?+

No. This tool only previews what a review rich result would look like. To actually earn one, your page needs valid AggregateRating schema markup, and Google still decides case by case whether to display it.

Why does my description fit on desktop but not mobile?+

Google renders search results at different container widths, and font sizes differ by device too, so copy that fits in two lines on desktop can wrap to three (or get cut off) on mobile. Use the Desktop/Mobile toggle to check both before you publish.

Do you store or see what I type in?+

No. It runs entirely in your browser, no form submissions, no data collected, nothing sent anywhere.

What’s a good target length for title tags and descriptions?+

Aim to stay under the pixel limit shown in the counter rather than treating character count alone as the rule; wide letters like W and M burn more pixel budget than narrow ones like i and l. As a rough starting point that usually lands you in the green, that’s around 50-60 characters for titles and 150-160 for descriptions.

GDPR

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