Heading & content analyzer · /tools/heading-analyzer

Audit any page's content structure

Paste any URL to extract the full H1–H6 outline, count words and reading time, check every image for alt text, and audit internal vs. external links. Catches the structural SEO issues that hurt rankings.

Enter a URL above to audit headings, content, and links.

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Paste a URL

    Enter any public page URL — homepage, blog post, product page, anything with structured content.

  2. Step 2

    We extract structure

    Our server fetches the HTML, removes the boilerplate (nav, footer, scripts), and walks the headings, paragraphs, images, and links.

  3. Step 3

    Get the audit

    You get a heading outline, word and reading-time counts, alt-text coverage, a link profile, and a list of structural fixes.

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FAQ

Why does heading hierarchy matter for SEO?
Google uses heading structure to understand the topic of a page and the relationship between sections. A page with proper H1→H2→H3 nesting tells Google what's a top-level topic and what's a sub-topic. Skipping levels (e.g. H1 → H3 with no H2) makes it harder for Google to understand the structure and can hurt your rankings for long-tail queries.
How many words should a page have?
There's no single magic number, but the median first-page result in Google is around 1,400 words for informational queries and 300-600 for commercial ones. The bigger issue is whether the page fully answers the query. This tool flags pages with fewer than 300 words because most pages that thin don't rank well for anything competitive.
What counts as a 'nofollow' link?
A nofollow link has the HTML attribute rel="nofollow" (or rel="ugc" or rel="sponsored"). Google treats these as hints that you don't endorse the target. Internal nofollow links are usually a sign of an SEO mistake — most of the time, you want Google to follow and crawl your own internal links.