Heading Tag Checker
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📋 Heading Tag Checker

Analyze H1-H6 heading structure of any webpage

Enter the full URL to analyze heading tags (H1-H6)

Analyzing heading tags...

📊 Heading Tag Analysis
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H1 Tags
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H2 Tags
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H3 Tags
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H4 Tags
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H5 Tags
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H6 Tags
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📖 How to Use
1
Enter Website URL

Paste the full URL of the website you want to analyze.

2
Click Check Button

Press the "Check Headings" button to analyze the page.

3
View Statistics

See the count of H1-H6 tags on the page.

4
Review Structure

Check the heading hierarchy and structure of the page.

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H1-H6 Count
All heading stats
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Full Structure
Complete hierarchy
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Color Coded
Easy to identify
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Free to Use
No registration

Ever hit “publish” on a blog post and wondered why Google didn’t seem to care? It happens a lot. Usually, the culprit is something simple people forget: messy or missing heading tags. Scanning your HTML by hand to check those H1, H2, H3 tags? It’s boring, takes forever, and let’s be honest—you’ll probably miss something. That’s why the Heading Tag Checker exists. It’s free, dead simple, and finds your heading mistakes in a snap. Fix those, and you’re already ahead of half your competition.

What the Heading Tag Checker Actually Does?

The tool couldn’t be easier: paste in a webpage link, hit a button, and it spits out a full list of every heading tag (H1 to H6) in order. You see your structure, plain and simple. No hunting through source code or wondering, “Did I forget an H1 somewhere?” Just clear answers—instantly.

Normally, doing this by hand means firing up developer tools and digging through ugly HTML for ages. The Heading Tag Checker needs less than two seconds. If you mess with YouTube stuff, there are other neat tools out there—like ones for Video Schema Generator or grabbing link Sitemap URL Extractor—but for on-page SEO, start here.

Key Features of the Heading Tag Checker

  1. Checks any URL instantly. No setup, no wait.
  2. Breaks down every heading: shows all H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, and H6 tags, in the order you used them and shows detail description.
  3. Flags problems: missing H1s, duplicate H1s, skipped heading levels.
  4. Works on your phone. Analyze pages while you’re on the bus.
  5. No signups, no emails, no traps. Just use it.

Who Actually Need to Use This Checker?

  • SEO pros: Audit client sites for heading problems before you dive deep.
  • Writers/bloggers: Make sure you have just one H1 and your subheadings make sense—before you hit publish.
  • Developers: Check if your templates actually create the right heading tags.
  • Marketers: Spy on competitors and see how they use headings to outrank you.
  • Students: Practice spotting good and bad heading structures on live sites.
  • Website owners: Quick health check on your own site—easy wins for SEO.

How to Use the Heading Tag Checker

  1. Grab the URL you want to check.
  2. Open the Heading Tag Checker
  3. Paste the URL into the analyze box.
  4. Hit “Check Headings”.
  5. The tool fetches the page and gives you a simple rundown of all its headings, including any problems it spots provide detail description.

What are the Benefits of Using Heading Tag Checker?

  • Save ridiculous amounts of time: No more digging through raw code.
  • Quick SEO wins: Google pays attention to clear, logical heading hierarchies. Get them right, and your rankings improve.
  • Plan smarter content: See what works for top-ranking competitors, and map your own structure to match—or beat—theirs.

Pro Tips for Best Results

  1. Check your main pages every month, and hang on to your exports so you can track changes.
  2. Pair heading checks with content audits—look at readability, keyword use in subheadings, and more.
  3. Always run a heading check after launching a redesign or switching CMS themes.
  4. Use the report for team collaboration—writers having a clear to-do list.
  5. Don’t judge by looks alone. Sometimes pages look fine, but the code tells a different story.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Yes. You can analyze any public page, news site, e-commerce page—whatever, as long as it’s online.

The tool shows either empty results or a warning, so you know to add headings ASAP.

Some sites block automated tools, or you might’ve pasted a broken link. Try another page, or see if it requires a login.

Not at all. Devs use it for troubleshooting, writers for content checks, and students for learning how real-world headings work.