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Answer · SEO Services

Do Meta Descriptions Affect Rankings?

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The short answer

No, meta descriptions are not a direct ranking factor (confirmed by Google since 2009). However, they directly affect click-through rate from the SERP, and CTR is a ranking signal. So well-written meta descriptions indirectly influence ranking by earning more clicks.

№ 01The longer answer

Meta descriptions are the 140-160 character snippet that appears below the page title in Google’s SERP. Google sometimes uses your meta description verbatim and sometimes generates its own from page content (usually when the meta description doesn’t match the searcher’s query well).

Direct ranking impact: zero. Google has stated this repeatedly. Indirect ranking impact: significant, because CTR is a ranking factor. A page with a 9% CTR ranks higher than an equivalent page with 4% CTR.

What earns CTR in meta descriptions: lead with the answer (not the brand), name the specific benefit (’14-day delivery, locked scope, refund if we miss’), match the query intent (transactional descriptions for transactional queries), include a call-to-action where natural.

Writing pattern: meta description as ad copy. 140-160 characters. Primary keyword in the first 60 characters. Specific benefit or stat. Call to action. Avoid generic ‘Learn more about our services here’ descriptions — Google will rewrite them.

№ 02Does Google always use my meta description?

No. About 60-70% of the time Google uses what you wrote. The other 30-40%, Google generates a snippet from page content that better matches the query. To increase the use rate, write meta descriptions that match the dominant search intent for the page’s primary keyword.

№ 03Should every page have a unique meta description?

Yes. Duplicate meta descriptions across pages waste an SEO opportunity. Each page targets different intent and queries; the meta description should be tuned to that page’s specific value proposition.

№ 04What’s the ideal meta description length?

140-160 characters. Mobile SERPs truncate at 120-140; desktop SERPs show 150-160. The first 100 characters carry the load — if the description doesn’t convince in those, the rest is filler.