Heading Analyzer

Check your heading hierarchy. Fix SEO structure issues instantly.

SEO guide

How to use the Heading analyzer

A heading analyzer checks whether your H1, H2 and H3 tags form a clear page outline. Good headings help readers scan quickly and help search engines understand the main topic and supporting sections.

What Clarity checks

  • Missing, duplicate or empty H1 tags
  • Skipped heading levels and messy outline structure
  • Heading text that is too vague to explain the page

Common issues found

  • !Multiple H1s competing for the main topic
  • !Design headings used only for styling without semantic order
  • !Pages that look fine visually but produce a confusing crawler outline

Example action

Example: a service page should usually have one H1 for the service, H2s for benefits/pricing/process/FAQs and H3s for detail under each section.

Read the SEO headings guide

Frequently asked questions

How many H1 tags should a page have?

One clear H1 is the safest pattern for most business and content pages because it defines the primary topic.

Do headings directly improve rankings?

Headings help search engines and users understand structure. They are not magic by themselves, but poor structure can weaken relevance and usability.

Should keywords be in headings?

Use keywords naturally where they help explain the section. Do not force the same phrase into every heading.

Heading Structure at Scale

Pro flags heading hierarchy issues across pages and tracks cleanup progress.

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