Google search preview

Preview how any URL may appear in Google Search. Check the title link, description snippet, favicon, and visible URL before publishing.

framer.com

https://www.framer.com

Title

Description

Preview Google search results

A Google search preview helps you review how a page may be presented in search results. Check the title link, snippet, favicon, and displayed URL so the result is clear, relevant, and easy to recognize.

Title

Review the title link for relevance, clarity, and length. Put the main subject early, avoid repetitive branding, and make sure the wording accurately describes the destination page.

Title

Description

framer.com

Description

Check whether the description gives searchers a useful reason to visit. Google may generate a different snippet from page content, so keep the metadata specific and support it with clear on-page copy.

Title

Description

framer.com

Image

Standard organic results do not always show a large preview image. When Google selects imagery for rich or enhanced results, use crawlable, relevant assets with strong composition and accurate alt text.

Favicon

Use a simple, recognizable favicon that remains legible at a very small size. A consistent icon helps searchers identify the source beside the site name and visible URL.

Title

Description

framer.com

A practical guide to Google search previews

Google assembles search results from page metadata, visible content, structured data, and its understanding of the query. A preview is not a guarantee, but it helps reveal weak titles, vague descriptions, and inconsistent site signals before indexing.

How does Google create a search result?

Google crawls the public page and evaluates the title element, headings, page copy, links, canonical signals, and other metadata. It can rewrite visible result text when another version appears more useful for a particular query.

Writing a useful title link

Describe the page directly and distinguish it from other pages on the site. Avoid keyword repetition, generic labels, and long brand prefixes that hide the subject on smaller screens.

Why Google may rewrite the snippet

The meta description is a strong suggestion rather than a fixed output. Google may select text from the page when it better matches the searcher’s query, so important explanations should also appear in the visible content.

Favicon and site-name signals

A crawlable favicon and consistent site identity help the result feel recognizable. Keep the icon stable, use a supported format, and make sure the site name is represented consistently across metadata and structured data.

Canonical URLs and duplicate pages

Canonical signals help Google choose the preferred version when similar pages exist. Align internal links, redirects, sitemap entries, and canonical tags so they point toward the same public URL.

Indexing and delayed updates

Changes are not reflected until Google recrawls and processes the page. Publish updates on the final URL, confirm that crawling is allowed, and use search inspection tools when an important page needs validation.

A Google search preview workflow

Review the title and description, verify the canonical URL, inspect the favicon and site name, confirm indexability, test structured data when relevant, publish the page, and check the live result after recrawling.