SEO Data Extractor
Understand the SEO Tactics Behind Any Page!
Understanding how competitors structure their pages can give you a clearer view of what’s working in your space. This tool helps you check the on-page details they’ve set, so you can see how they handle things like the meta title, meta description, keywords, canonical tag, and headings.
SEO Data Extractor for Page Insights!
This free SEO Data Extractor is for anyone who wants a clear view of how a page is set up, without digging through code or using complicated tools. Add a URL and it will pull the key on-page details that help you understand what search engines are likely to pick up.
It’s a good fit for beginners, small business owners, and anyone running a site without technical support. Instead of hunting through the page source, you get a clean summary of the essentials in one place.
The scan returns the basics the tool supports, including the meta title, meta description, keywords, the canonical tag, and headings where they are present in the page HTML. This makes it easy to spot gaps, sanity check your setup, and compare pages quickly so you can make practical updates with confidence.
Meta Title:
Meta Description:
Meta Keywords:
Canonical Tag:
Meta Robots:
If this page is JavaScript-rendered, headings may not appear in the fetched HTML (the browser can’t “run” the page before extracting). In that case, you’ll need a server-side fetch or a headless renderer.
How To Use the Site Extractor
Using the SEO Data Extractor is simple. There’s nothing to install, no logins, and no fiddly settings. Add a URL, hit the button, and the tool pulls the key details together in a few seconds.
It works well if you are checking your own pages or looking at how other sites structure theirs. The results are laid out clearly, so you can spot issues fast and know what to fix next.
Enter the URL
Add the full URL of the page you want to analyse into the input box. This gives the tool a clear starting point and tells it exactly which page to scan. It works with most publicly accessible webpages, so you can use it for your own pages or for research.
Once the link is in place, the tool pulls the key on-page details it can read directly from the page HTML. If a site loads headings through JavaScript, those headings might not show in the results, so it’s worth treating the headings section as a quick check rather than the final word.
Extract SEO Data
After adding the URL, click the button to start the scan. The tool checks the page source and pulls out the key on-page details it supports, like the meta title, meta description, keywords, the canonical tag, and headings that are present in the HTML.
There’s nothing technical to set up and no extra steps. It gathers the information and lays it out clearly, ready for you to review.
Review Your Results
Your results appear below the tool, giving you a clear breakdown of the on-page details found on the page. You will see the meta title, meta description, keywords, the canonical tag, and the heading structure where it is available in the page HTML. This makes it easy to spot gaps in your own content, tidy up weaker areas, or understand how other pages structure their information.
A quick note on headings, if a site loads headings through JavaScript, they may not show in the results. In that case, use the headings section as a helpful guide, not a final check.
Once you have everything in front of you, you can download the results and keep them for planning or future updates.
Missing meta titles, weak descriptions, and empty alt tags are some of the fastest fixes you can make. They take very little time to update and can lead to noticeable improvements in visibility.
Benefits of the SEO Extractor
Competitor checks can feel like hard work, but they don’t have to be. This tool gives you a quick look at how other pages are put together, using the details it can read from the page HTML. You can review their meta title, meta description, keywords, canonical tag, and heading structure without digging through code.
It’s also useful for your own site. Quick checks like confirming your headings make sense, spotting keyword repetition, or seeing if a canonical tag is missing can help you tidy up pages and avoid common on-page issues.
When you can see how a page is organised at a glance, it’s easier to plan improvements. You can line your content up with what people expect to find, make the page clearer to read, and keep your on-page setup consistent across the site.
Get in touch today, and let's take the first step towards improving your business's visibility.
SEO Data Extractor FAQs
Here you’ll find clear, simple answers to the questions people often ask about robots.txt files. The goal is to help you understand what they do, how they shape crawling behaviour and why they play an important part in keeping your site easy for search engines to read.
What type of pages give the most useful results when using the extractor?
The tool works best on pages with a clear structure, like service pages, product pages, and blog posts. These tend to include the on-page details the tool can extract, such as the meta title, meta description, headings, keywords, and a canonical tag, which makes the results more useful.
Very lightweight pages, like simple landing screens or minimal homepages, often return less detail because there is less to pull from the page HTML. For the clearest picture, run it across a mix of your own key pages and a few comparable competitor pages, then compare what shows up and what is missing.
Why do some pages show missing titles, descriptions, or alt tags even when the site looks complete?
Plenty of websites look great on the surface but still miss the basic metadata search engines rely on. That usually happens when a page uses defaults from a theme or page builder, pulls content in automatically, or prioritises visual layout without filling in the key fields. If the extractor shows missing elements, it’s often a sign that important details have not been set on that page. Fixing the gaps is usually quick, and it can make your listings clearer in search results and your on-page setup more consistent across the site.
Can the extractor help identify weak content structure on a page?
By pulling the headings from H1 downwards, the tool gives you a clear view of how the page is laid out. If the structure looks uneven, repeats the same headings, or jumps between levels, it’s often a sign the page could be easier to follow.
Spotting patterns like this helps you tighten up your content. You can make sections clearer, keep headings consistent, and organise information in a way that’s easier for people to scan and for search engines to understand.
What should I look at first when reviewing the extractor results?
A simple way to use the results is to start with anything missing or clearly weak, like an empty meta title, a generic title, or a very short meta description. These tend to be quick fixes, and they often improve how your page reads in search results.
Next, check the heading layout. Look for a clear H1, sensible section headings, and a structure that matches what the page is trying to do. If headings are repeated or the page jumps between levels, it can be a sign the content needs tightening up.
Finally, review the keywords and canonical tag. Keywords can highlight mixed topics or repeated phrasing, and the canonical tag can help you spot pages that may be competing with similar versions of the same content. This order keeps the focus on changes that are easy to action and useful straight away.