Bulk Meta Extractor

Free bulk meta extractor. Paste up to 10 URLs, get title, description, canonical, OG tags, robots meta and H1 in one place.

About the tool

What is the SBMM Bulk Meta Tag Extractor?

The SBMM Bulk Meta Tag Extractor is a free online tool that pulls title tags, meta descriptions, canonical URLs, Open Graph data, Twitter Cards, robots directives, and H1 headings from up to ten URLs in parallel. Paste a list of URLs, get back a clean per-URL card with every metadata field side by side, plus duplicate-detection across the batch.

Meta tags are the on-page SEO signals search engines and AI crawlers read first to understand each page. A missing canonical, an over-length title, a duplicate description across multiple URLs, or a broken Open Graph image is the kind of cheap fix that lifts CTR and ranks measurably, but only if you can see the problem clearly across your whole content set, not one URL at a time.

This bulk extractor is the audit tool for that. Use it on your own site after a CMS migration to confirm metadata survived intact. Use it on a competitor URL set to reverse-engineer their title and description patterns. Use it on a content batch to find duplicate titles across the cluster. Use it on URLs flagged by our Site Audit Pro to deep-dive on the worst offenders, or run the on-page audit for the full 122-check breakdown of any single URL.

Step by step

How to use this tool in 3 steps

  1. Step 01

    Paste up to 10 URLs

    Drop a list of URLs (one per line) into the form. The free tier accepts up to ten URLs per run; SBMM Pro lifts the cap. URLs can be from the same domain or a mix of competitors and your own site.

  2. Step 02

    Parallel fetch + parse

    The extractor fetches every URL in parallel, parses the HTML, extracts title, meta description, canonical, robots meta, Open Graph (og:title / og:description / og:image), Twitter Card, and the first H1, and records the response time.

  3. Step 03

    Review the table + spot dupes

    See a per-URL card with every metadata field, plus a batch-level duplicate report that flags titles or descriptions that repeat across more than one URL. Copy values straight from the table, or export the full batch as a CSV.

Why this tool

Why use this tool

  • Up to 10 URLs per batch

    Free tier processes ten URLs in parallel per run. Enough to audit a content cluster, compare against a competitor set, or sample-check the top organic pages on a domain in one pass.

  • Title / desc / canonical / robots

    Pulls the four core SEO metadata fields plus the H1 heading and content-type so you can audit cosmetic SEO at scale without opening each URL in a separate tab.

  • Open Graph + Twitter Card

    Includes og:title, og:description, og:image, og:type, twitter:card, twitter:title, twitter:description, and twitter:image so social-share previews are auditable in the same report.

  • Duplicate detection across batch

    Highlights titles and descriptions that repeat across more than one URL in the batch. Internal duplication is a known Helpful Content Update demotion signal, so catching it at the meta layer pays off fast.

  • Response time per URL

    Records the HTTP status and response time per URL so you can spot slow pages and unexpected redirects across the batch without running a separate speed test on each one.

  • Free, one run a day

    One full ten-URL audit per day on the free tier covers any normal author or solo SEO workflow. SBMM Pro raises the per-batch cap to 100 URLs and ships CSV export and run history.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is a meta tag in SEO?

A meta tag is an HTML element in the head of a page that gives search engines and social platforms structured information about the page: the title shown in SERPs, the description shown beneath it, the canonical URL, the robots directives that control indexing, and the Open Graph data that powers social-share previews.

Which meta tags actually affect SEO rankings?

The title tag has direct ranking impact and direct CTR impact. The meta description has no direct ranking impact but drives CTR (a strong indirect signal). The canonical tag controls which URL gets credit when multiple URLs serve similar content. The robots meta controls indexing. Open Graph affects social CTR but not direct ranking.

Why use a bulk extractor instead of viewing each URL?

Auditing meta tags one URL at a time is fine for two or three pages, but a real audit covers dozens. Bulk extraction collapses that work to one paste and one report, surfaces duplicates across the batch automatically, and lets you compare patterns across competitors that you would never spot tab by tab.

What is a canonical tag?

A canonical tag is a meta element that tells search engines which URL is the primary version when multiple URLs serve similar content (product variants, paginated archives, tracking-parameter URLs). The canonical URL gets the ranking credit; the non-canonical URLs are excluded or weighted down in search.

Why does Google sometimes rewrite my title?

Google rewrites a title when it judges the on-page title is too long, too keyword-stuffed, doesn't match search intent for the query, or repeats the site name unnecessarily. The bulk extractor shows the on-page title; running the URL through Search Console is the only way to see Google's rewrite for any given query.

What is Open Graph metadata?

Open Graph is a metadata protocol Facebook published in 2010 that controls how a URL renders when shared on social platforms: the title, the description, the image, and the type (article, product, video). LinkedIn, Twitter, Slack, Discord, and WhatsApp all read Open Graph data, so it is the default social-preview standard.

Can it audit a staging or private URL?

Only if the staging URL is publicly reachable. If it is behind HTTP auth or an IP allowlist, the extractor cannot fetch the response. For private staging, use a browser dev-tools network tab or run the audit after pushing to a public preview environment.

Does it follow redirects?

Yes. The extractor follows up to ten redirects per URL and reports the final URL in the result row. Long redirect chains are flagged because they waste crawl budget and add latency that hurts Core Web Vitals.