Analyzer Inputs
Use the fields below to simulate a real on-page audit. The calculator scores your page on ten weighted categories totaling 100 points.
Example Data Table
This example shows a realistic input profile and how major metrics might look before optimization work begins.
| Metric | Example Value | Ideal Target | Observation |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEO Title Length | 47 characters | 50–60 characters | Needs more precision and intent. |
| Meta Description Length | 132 characters | 120–160 characters | Good snippet range. |
| Content Word Count | 780 words | 800–2200 words | Slightly thin for depth. |
| H1 / H2 Structure | 1 H1 / 2 H2 | 1 H1 / 2+ H2 | Acceptable structure. |
| Keyword Density | 3.10% | 0.5%–2.5% | Possibly over-optimized. |
| Internal / Broken Links | 2 / 1 | 3+ / 0 | Link architecture needs repair. |
| Image Alt Coverage | 66.7% | 90%+ | Accessibility gap exists. |
| Page Speed Score | 58 | 75+ | Performance is limiting results. |
Formula Used
Overall SEO Score = Title + Meta + Content + Headings + Keyword + Links + Media + Technical + Performance + Freshness
Maximum Score = 100 points
Keyword Density (%) = (Keyword Occurrences ÷ Total Word Count) × 100
Alt Coverage (%) = (Images With Alt Text ÷ Total Images) × 100
Technical Score combines canonical tag, HTTPS, mobile friendliness, structured data, Open Graph presence, and clean URL length.
Performance Score blends page speed and readability because strong rankings usually depend on both relevance and usability.
How to Use This Calculator
- Paste the page URL and enter the focus keyword you are targeting.
- Fill in the title, meta description, and measured content values from your page.
- Add heading counts, link counts, media details, and manual technical checks.
- Enter performance and readability scores from your preferred audit tools.
- Click Analyze SEO to view the score, graph, detailed table, and recommended fixes.
FAQs
1) What does this analyzer actually measure?
It measures common on-page SEO signals such as title quality, meta length, heading structure, keyword usage, links, image alt coverage, technical readiness, speed, readability, and content freshness.
2) Is a high score a guarantee of better rankings?
No. A high score shows strong on-page foundations, but rankings also depend on competition, backlinks, search intent alignment, brand trust, and overall site authority.
3) What keyword density is usually safest?
A natural range around 0.5% to 2.5% is often safer. The exact number matters less than readability, relevance, and strong placement in important page elements.
4) Why does the tool care about internal links?
Internal links help search engines discover related pages, understand topic clusters, distribute authority, and guide users toward deeper content across your site.
5) Are images required for every page?
Not always. Some pages perform well without many images, but when images are present, descriptive alt text and relevant visual support usually improve overall page quality.
6) Why include freshness in the score?
Freshness helps many pages stay accurate and competitive. Updated examples, current data, and recent edits can strengthen trust and improve engagement.
7) Can I use this for service pages and blog posts?
Yes. It works for blog posts, landing pages, local pages, product pages, and service pages as long as you enter realistic metrics for that page type.
8) What should I fix first after analyzing?
Start with broken links, missing canonical signals, weak titles, poor keyword placement, slow speed, and low readability. These often produce the quickest practical improvements.