Get an instant, comprehensive health check of any website. Paste your URL below and we'll analyze your SEO fundamentals, technical setup, and on-page signals — then give you a prioritized list of exactly what to fix.
Checks: title tags · meta descriptions · H1/H2 headings · Open Graph · Twitter cards · canonical URL · mobile viewport · robots.txt · sitemap.xml · SSL · structured data · image alt text
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Free consultation →A website analyzer is an automated tool that crawls your website — exactly as a search engine bot does — and evaluates it against hundreds of known SEO and technical best practices. Rather than manually checking each element, a website analyzer gives you an instant, objective snapshot of where your site stands and what needs fixing.
Our free website analyzer checks the factors Google has publicly confirmed matter most for organic search rankings: page titles, meta descriptions, heading structure, canonical tags, Open Graph tags, mobile-friendliness indicators, HTTPS status, XML sitemaps, robots.txt configuration, and structured data markup.
For local businesses in Southern Oregon — whether you're a plumber in Roseburg, a restaurant in Medford, or a contractor in Grants Pass — getting these fundamentals right is the difference between appearing on page one of Google or being invisible to potential customers searching for exactly what you offer.
Google evaluates hundreds of signals when deciding how to rank websites. While backlinks and domain authority are important, on-page SEO fundamentals and technical health directly affect whether Google can even properly crawl, understand, and index your pages — making them prerequisites for rankings.
A website with a low health score is fighting against itself. Missing title tags mean Google writes its own (usually worse). Missing meta descriptions lead to poor click-through rates from search results. No H1 tag leaves Google guessing what your page is about. No structured data means you miss out on rich results like star ratings and FAQs that drive 5–10× more clicks.
According to HubSpot, 75% of users never scroll past the first page of search results. If your website health score is dragging you down, fixing it can have an immediate, measurable impact on where you appear.
80–100
Good
Following SEO best practices. Focus on content and backlinks.
60–79
Needs Work
Multiple improvements needed. Fixing these will improve rankings.
0–59
Poor
Significant technical issues likely hurting your rankings now.
After analyzing thousands of local business websites, here are the most common issues we find — and why they hurt your rankings:
Missing or duplicate H1 tags
Your H1 is the primary on-page ranking signal. Google uses it to understand your page topic. Without it, you're leaving your ranking potential on the table.
Title tag too short or too long
Titles under 30 characters miss keyword opportunities. Titles over 65 characters get truncated in search results, reducing click-through rates.
No meta description
Google often uses your meta description as the text shown under your search result. A missing or auto-generated description usually leads to lower click-through rates.
Missing HTTPS (SSL certificate)
Google officially uses HTTPS as a ranking signal. More importantly, Chrome marks HTTP sites as 'Not Secure' which destroys user trust — especially for service businesses where trust is everything.
No XML sitemap
A sitemap helps search engines discover all your pages, especially new or deep pages that aren't easily found through internal links. Without it, some of your pages may never get indexed.
No structured data
Structured data enables rich results in search — star ratings, FAQ dropdowns, product prices — that dramatically increase click-through rates. Local businesses with LocalBusiness schema also get better Maps integration.
When you submit a URL, our server makes an HTTP request to your website using the same approach as a search engine crawler — with a descriptive User-Agent that identifies itself as our analyzer. We follow redirects, request HTML content, and read the full page source.
We simultaneously check your robots.txt and sitemap.xml files to evaluate your crawl configuration. All three requests happen in parallel to return results in seconds.
Results are cached on the result page for 24 hours, so sharing your result URL will load quickly for anyone you send it to. The analysis is performed entirely on our servers — your visitors are never affected.
1
Fetch
We request your page just like Googlebot — reading the live HTML as it appears to a crawler.
2
Parse & Score
We extract 14 critical SEO and technical signals and calculate weighted scores for each.
3
Prioritize
Issues are sorted by impact — critical failures first, then warnings, then optimizations.
Linear Web Solutions specializes in fixing exactly these issues for Southern Oregon businesses. We'll review your results together on a free call and give you a clear action plan — no obligation.
A website analyzer is a tool that automatically scans your website and evaluates it against SEO and technical best practices. It checks elements like title tags, meta descriptions, heading structure, SSL certificates, mobile-friendliness indicators, structured data, robots.txt, and sitemap.xml — then generates scores and specific recommendations.
The website health score is a composite score (0–100) calculated from both your SEO score and technical score. SEO factors (title quality, meta descriptions, headings, Open Graph tags, alt text) account for 55% of the score. Technical factors (HTTPS, mobile viewport, robots.txt, sitemap, canonical tags, structured data) account for 45%.
A score of 80–100 is considered good and suggests your website follows SEO best practices. 60–79 indicates there are opportunities for improvement. Below 60 means there are significant issues that are likely hurting your search rankings and need attention.
Our analyzer fetches your live website just like a search engine crawler does and reads the actual HTML. Results reflect your real on-page SEO status in real time. We check the same signals Google evaluates when crawling and indexing pages.
Common reasons for a low SEO score include: missing or poorly written title tags, no meta description, missing or duplicate H1 headings, no Open Graph tags for social sharing, missing alt text on images, and no Twitter card tags. Each of these is fixable — our tool shows you exactly what to address.
The technical SEO score measures the infrastructure and configuration of your website rather than its content. It evaluates whether your site uses HTTPS, has a mobile viewport meta tag, provides a robots.txt file, offers an XML sitemap, uses canonical tags, implements structured data, and doesn't have a noindex directive blocking search engines.
No. Our tool makes a single HTTP request to your public website — identical to any web browser or search engine bot visiting your site. It does not modify anything on your site, submit any forms, or interact with your content beyond reading the HTML source.
A canonical URL tells search engines which version of a page is the 'official' one when multiple URLs contain the same or similar content. Without it, search engines may split ranking signals between duplicate pages and reduce your overall SEO authority. Adding a canonical tag consolidates this authority onto a single URL.
Structured data (JSON-LD schema markup) helps Google understand what your content is about and can unlock rich results in search — like star ratings, FAQs, product prices, and event details appearing directly in search results. These rich results significantly improve click-through rates from search.
In most CMS platforms like WordPress, you can add a meta description through an SEO plugin like Yoast or Rank Math. In a custom-coded site, add <meta name='description' content='Your 120–155 character description here'> inside the <head> section. Keep it between 120–155 characters and include your primary keyword.
Open Graph tags control how your pages appear when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and other social platforms. Without them, social shares show generic, unattractive previews that get fewer clicks. You need og:title, og:description, and og:image at minimum.
We recommend running a full website analysis at least monthly, and any time you make significant changes to your site — new pages, redesigns, CMS updates, or content changes. Regular monitoring helps you catch technical issues before they impact your rankings.
Yes — you can analyze any publicly accessible website. Many businesses use our tool to compare their website health score against competitors and identify SEO gaps. For a dedicated head-to-head comparison, try our Competitor Gap Analyzer tool.
Prioritize issues marked as 'Critical' first, especially: HTTPS (if missing), H1 tag (if missing), page title (if missing or too short/long), and meta description (if missing). These have the highest impact on your SEO. Then address warnings like Open Graph tags and sitemap.xml.
Whether you need a faster website, stronger local SEO, better Google rankings, or a complete website redesign, Linear Web Solutions can help.