📘 SEO Tools

Open Graph Tag Generator

Create perfect Open Graph meta tags and instantly preview how your page looks when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, and Twitter/X — all free, no sign-up.

Live Facebook preview
LinkedIn preview
WhatsApp preview
Twitter/X preview
Full tag validation
📘 Open Graph Tag Settings
Recommended: up to 95 characters. Shown as the headline in social share cards.
Recommended: 2–3 sentences. Facebook shows up to ~200 characters.
The canonical URL of the page being shared.
Recommended: 1200×630px JPG or PNG. Minimum: 600×315px.
🖼 Image preview — enter URL above
👁 Live Social Preview
🖼 Add og:image above
yoursite.com
Your OG Title Here
Your OG description will appear here when your page is shared on Facebook.
🖼 Add og:image above
Your OG Title Here
yoursite.com
🖼 Add og:image above
Your OG Title Here
Your OG description will appear here on Twitter/X.
yoursite.com

What Are Open Graph Tags and Why Does Every Website Need Them?

Open Graph (OG) tags are a set of HTML meta tags introduced by Facebook in 2010 that let website owners control exactly how their pages appear when shared on social media. Without OG tags, platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Telegram, and Slack attempt to auto-generate a preview from your page content — often producing ugly results with a random image, a truncated or irrelevant title, and no description at all.

With properly configured OG tags, every share of your URL becomes a professional, branded card with the exact image, headline, and description you choose. Studies consistently show that social posts with compelling images and titles get 2–3× more clicks and shares than posts with no preview or a poor auto-generated one. For any website that receives traffic from social media, Open Graph tags are not optional — they are essential.

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The Most Important OG Tag: og:image

The og:image tag is the single most impactful Open Graph tag. A striking, relevant image dramatically increases the chance that someone will click your shared link over others in their feed.

  • Optimal size: 1200×630px (1.91:1 ratio) — displays perfectly on all platforms without cropping
  • Minimum size: 600×315px — below this, Facebook will not show a large card
  • File format: JPG or PNG — WEBP may not render on all platforms
  • File size: Keep under 8MB — compress images before using
  • Always use absolute URLshttps://yoursite.com/image.jpg, never relative paths like /image.jpg
  • Include text sparingly — Facebook penalizes images with more than 20% text overlay
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All Open Graph Tags Explained

There are four required OG tags and many optional ones. Here's what each does:

  • og:titleRequired. Headline of the card. Up to 95 chars recommended.
  • og:descriptionRecommended. Supporting text. Up to 200 chars.
  • og:imageRequired. URL of the preview image. 1200×630px.
  • og:urlRequired. Canonical URL of the page.
  • og:type — Content type: website, article, product, etc.
  • og:site_name — Your brand/site name shown below the card.
  • og:locale — Language and region, e.g. en_US, fr_FR.
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Do Open Graph Tags Help SEO?

OG tags don't directly influence Google search rankings — Google has confirmed they are not a ranking factor. However, they indirectly improve SEO in several important ways:

  • More social clicks → more traffic → stronger engagement signals to Google
  • More shares → more backlinks from people linking to content they discovered on social media
  • Brand credibility → professional-looking shares build trust and encourage sharing
  • Reduced bounce rate → users who arrive from well-described social cards know what to expect, so they stay longer
  • LinkedIn & Pinterest use OG data for their own indexing, indirectly improving discovery
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How to Test Your Open Graph Tags

After adding OG tags to your page, always verify they work correctly before sharing widely:

  • Facebook Sharing Debugger: developers.facebook.com/tools/debug — paste your URL to see the exact card Facebook will show, and force a cache refresh
  • LinkedIn Post Inspector: linkedin.com/post-inspector — validate and refresh LinkedIn's cache of your page
  • Twitter Card Validator: cards-dev.twitter.com/validator — preview your Twitter Card
  • OpenGraph.xyz: free tool to preview OG tags across multiple platforms simultaneously
  • Important: platforms cache OG data — after updating tags, use the debugger tools to force a cache refresh

How to Add Open Graph Tags to Your Website

Step 1

Fill in Your Details

Enter your page title, description, URL, and image URL. Use the character counters — aim for under 95 chars for title, under 200 for description.

Step 2

Preview Each Platform

Switch between Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, and Twitter tabs to see exactly how your card will appear. Adjust until it looks great on all four.

Step 3

Generate Tags

Click Generate OG Tags to produce a complete, validated HTML snippet ready to paste into your website.

Step 4

Paste into <head>

Copy the HTML and paste it inside the <head>...</head> section of your page. In WordPress, use Yoast SEO or Rank Math.

Step 5

Validate & Refresh

Use Facebook Sharing Debugger to confirm your tags are read correctly and to clear the platform's cache of your old preview.

Step 6

Create a Unique OG Image

Design a dedicated 1200×630px social image for each key page using Canva, Figma, or a similar tool for maximum click-through impact.

Complete Open Graph Tag Reference
TagRequired?Recommended ValueNotes
og:title✅ RequiredUp to 95 charactersHeadline shown in card. Make it compelling.
og:description⚡ RecommendedUp to 200 charactersSupporting text. Describe value clearly.
og:image✅ Required1200×630px JPG/PNGAbsolute URL. Biggest CTR driver.
og:url✅ RequiredCanonical page URLFull absolute URL including https://
og:type✅ Requiredwebsite / article / productAffects how Facebook indexes the content.
og:site_name⚡ RecommendedYour brand nameShown below the card on Facebook.
og:localeOptionalen_US, fr_FR, ar_MAHelps Facebook target the right audience.
og:image:widthOptional1200Helps platforms render without layout shift.
og:image:heightOptional630Helps platforms render without layout shift.
og:image:altOptionalDescribe the imageAccessibility — used by screen readers.
article:authorArticle onlyAuthor name or URLOnly relevant when og:type = article.
article:tagArticle onlyComma-separated tagsHelps with Facebook topic targeting.

✅ Why Use WebTigers Open Graph Generator?

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4-Platform Preview

Preview your card on Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, and Twitter simultaneously — no other free tool offers all four at once.

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Live Image Preview

Enter your image URL and see it rendered in the card preview instantly. No guessing how the image will look.

Built-in Validation

Real-time badges flag missing required tags, oversized descriptions, and non-absolute image URLs before you publish.

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Article Tags Support

Switch type to "article" to unlock article:author, article:section, and article:tag fields for complete blog/news support.

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100% Private

All processing is done in your browser. Your URLs and content are never sent to any server.

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Free Forever

No account required, no usage limits, no watermarks. Generate OG tags for every page of every site you manage.

Frequently Asked Questions About Open Graph Tags

What are Open Graph tags and why do I need them? +
Open Graph tags are HTML meta tags that control how your page appears when shared on social media platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, and Telegram. Without them, these platforms auto-generate a preview from your page content — often with a random or missing image, wrong title, and no description. OG tags let you define exactly what image, headline, and description appear in every social share of your page, turning casual link shares into compelling, branded cards that drive clicks.
What is the best image size for Open Graph? +
The recommended Open Graph image size is 1200×630 pixels at a 1.91:1 aspect ratio. This ensures your image displays correctly on Facebook, LinkedIn, and other platforms without being cropped or resized. The minimum accepted size is 600×315 pixels — below this, Facebook will not display a large card preview. Use JPG or PNG format, keep the file under 8MB, and always use an absolute URL starting with https://. Avoid placing important text in the edges of the image as some platforms crop to a square thumbnail.
Do Open Graph tags help with Google SEO? +
Open Graph tags are not a direct Google ranking factor. However, they improve SEO indirectly: better-looking social cards get more clicks and shares, which drives more traffic and earns more backlinks — both of which are real ranking signals. LinkedIn and Pinterest also use OG data for their own content indexing, which improves discoverability on those platforms. In short, investing in OG tags can meaningfully increase your overall organic visibility even if Google itself doesn't read them for ranking.
Why is Facebook showing old OG data after I updated my tags? +
Facebook caches OG data from pages it has previously crawled. After updating your tags, you need to manually clear Facebook's cache using the Facebook Sharing Debugger at developers.facebook.com/tools/debug. Paste your page URL and click "Scrape Again" to force Facebook to re-crawl your page and update its cached preview. This may take a few minutes to propagate. LinkedIn has a similar tool called the Post Inspector at linkedin.com/post-inspector.
What is og:type and which value should I use? +
The og:type tag tells social platforms what kind of content your page contains. The most common values are: website for general pages and homepages, article for blog posts and news articles, product for e-commerce product pages, video.movie for video content, and book for books or publications. Use article for blog content to unlock additional tags like article:author, article:section, and article:tag that help Facebook categorize and distribute your content more accurately.
Where do I add Open Graph tags in WordPress? +
The easiest way to add OG tags in WordPress is through an SEO plugin. Yoast SEO and Rank Math both have dedicated Social tab settings where you can set the OG title, description, and image for each post and page directly from the editor — no coding needed. For manual control, copy the generated HTML from this tool and paste it into your theme's header.php file inside the <head> section, or use the Insert Headers and Footers plugin to add it site-wide without editing theme files.