How to Write Search Snippets That Survive Google's Pixel Limits and Rewrites
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Text & Developer
Most people write a title tag, count to sixty characters, and call it done. The trouble is that Google never counted characters in the first place. It measures the rendered width of your text in pixels, using a fixed font for the blue title link and a smaller one for the description. A capital W can be three or four times wider than a lowercase i, so two titles of identical length can have very different fates: one fits neatly, the other gets sliced off with an ellipsis. Previewing the real rendered string is the only way to know which outcome you will get.
Start with the title, because it carries the most weight for clicks and rankings. Lead with the term you most want to win, since the left side of a title gets the strongest visual and algorithmic emphasis, and it is the part least likely to be cut. Put your brand name last, separated by a pipe or dash, and treat it as expendable; Google removes the brand from titles in a majority of its rewrites, so do not build anything load-bearing at the end. As you type into the preview, watch for the moment the ellipsis appears and trim back until your full promise is visible.
The meta description is your sales pitch, not a ranking factor, so write it to earn the click. You have roughly 150 to 160 characters of comfortable desktop space, but mobile listings show less, so put the hook and the searcher's main keyword inside the first 120 characters. Write a complete, specific sentence that summarizes what the page delivers; vague boilerplate is one of the top reasons Google throws out your description and substitutes a sentence scraped from your body copy instead. A concrete, query-relevant description gives Google a reason to keep yours.
Accept that you are writing a strong suggestion rather than a guarantee. Google rewrites the majority of titles and most descriptions to align them with the exact query a person typed, and that behavior has been climbing year over year. You cannot force your exact text to appear, but you can make rewrites less likely: match real search intent, avoid keyword stuffing and duplicate tags across pages, keep within the pixel budget, and skip odd symbols that Google tends to strip. Clean, honest, query-aligned metadata is rewritten far less often than padded or generic copy.
Finally, treat the preview as a quality gate in your publishing checklist, not a one-time novelty. Before any page goes live, paste its title, description, and URL into the tool, confirm nothing truncates on desktop or mobile, and read the snippet the way a stranger scanning ten results would. If the listing does not make you want to click, rewrite it. This thirty-second habit, repeated across every page, compounds into a meaningfully higher click-through rate without changing a single thing about your rankings.
Quick tips
- Front-load the primary keyword in the title so it stays visible even if Google trims the end.
- Place your brand name at the end of the title and assume it may be dropped; never put critical words after it.
- Fit the most important part of your meta description within the first 120 characters so it holds up on mobile.
- Test the same snippet with both wide and narrow phrasing; swapping a few wide words can pull a truncated title back into the visible range.
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