Create professional Open Graph tags instantly with our free and easy-to-use tool for enhanced social media previews.
So basically, this thing helps your website links look good when you share them on social media. You know when you post a link and it shows a nice image, title, and description? That's what this tool does. It creates OG tags—special bits of code you add to your site—so your links don't end up with messy previews or blank images. It's like giving your website a glow-up for Facebook, LinkedIn, or wherever you're sharing.
Just paste in your info, click generate, and boom—fancy social preview ready to go. No tech skills needed. No weird downloads. Just vibes.
Step 1: Open the Open Graph Tag Generator (easy enough).
Step 2: Type in your page title, a short description, and the image URL you want to show when someone shares your link.
Step 3: Click that magic "Generate" button.
Step 4: Boom—your custom OG tags appear. You can copy and paste them right into your site's <head> section.
Tip: Use a good image. Like, not your blurry logo from 2012.
When you share a website link on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn—whatever—those platforms pull info from your site to create a preview. But if your site doesn't have proper OG tags, that preview can look bad. Like, "why is this just a blank gray box?" bad. This generator fixes that. It lets you control exactly what people see when they share your link. That matters when you care about clicks, first impressions, or just looking legit online.
Nope! You just fill out a form and copy the result. That's it. No coding knowledge needed. No stress.
Yes! You can create new Open Graph tags for as many pages as you want. Just update the fields and generate again.
Yep. It's built to help your links show up clean and correctly on all the big platforms that use OG tags—including Facebook, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, etc.
Totally. Just drop in the image URL you want, and it'll add it to the tag output so your link preview shows the right pic.
Sort of! The tool shows you the generated tags right there. You can also test how they'll look using Facebook's Sharing Debugger or LinkedIn's Post Inspector.