Preview how your webpage looks when shared on Facebook, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Discord, and more. Analyze OG tags and get optimization tips.
The Open Graph protocol, originally created by Facebook, enables any webpage to become a rich object in a social graph. When you share a link on Facebook, Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Discord, Slack, or WhatsApp, these platforms read the Open Graph meta tags from your page to generate a rich preview card with a title, description, image, and URL.
Without proper OG tags, social platforms will attempt to auto-generate a preview by scraping your page content — often resulting in missing images, truncated titles, or irrelevant descriptions. This can dramatically reduce click-through rates on shared links.
The essential OG tags every page should have are: og:title (the title shown in the share card), og:description (a compelling summary), og:image (a high-quality image, ideally 1200x630px for Facebook), og:url (the canonical URL), and og:type (usually "website" or "article").
For Twitter/X, additional Twitter Card tags provide finer control: twitter:card (summary, summary_large_image, or player), twitter:site (your @handle), and twitter:creator (the author's @handle). If Twitter Card tags are missing, Twitter falls back to OG tags.
Use this tool to preview exactly how your page will appear across all major platforms and identify any missing or misconfigured tags before sharing.