meta tags and attributes that Google supports
  
  This page explains what meta tags are, which meta tags and HTML
  attributes Google supports to control indexing, and other important points to note when
  implementing meta tags on your site.
meta tags
  meta tags are HTML tags used to provide additional information about a page to
  search engines and other clients. Clients process the meta tags and ignore those they don't
  support. meta tags are added to the <head> section of
  your HTML page and generally look like this:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <meta name="description" content="Author: A.N. Author, Illustrator: P. Picture, Category: Books, Price: £9.24, Length: 784 pages"> <meta name="google-site-verification" content="+nxGUDJ4QpAZ5l9Bsjdi102tLVC21AIh5d1Nl23908vVuFHs34="> <title>Example Books - high-quality used books for children</title> <meta name="robots" content="noindex,nofollow"> </head> </html>
Google supports the following meta tags:
| List of metatags that Google supports | |
|---|---|
| description | <meta name="description" content="A description of the page"> | 
| robots and googlebot | <meta name="robots" content="..., ..."> <meta name="googlebot" content="..., ..."> 
          These  The  In the case of conflicting  The default values are  You can also specify this information in the header of your pages using the
           | 
| notranslate | <meta name="googlebot" content="notranslate"> 
          When Google recognizes that the contents of a page aren't in the language that the
          user likely wants to read, Google may provide a translated title link and snippet in search results.
          If the user clicks the translated title link, all further user interaction with the page
          is through Google Translate, which will automatically translate any links followed. In
          general, this gives you the chance to provide your unique and
          compelling content to a much larger group of users. However, there may be situations
          where this is not desired. This  | 
| nopagereadaloud | <meta name="google" content="nopagereadaloud"> Prevents various Google text-to-speech services from reading aloud web pages using text-to-speech (TTS). | 
| google-site-verification | <meta name="google-site-verification" content="..."> 
          You can use this tag on the top-level page of your site to verify ownership for Search Console.
          Note that while the values of the  | 
| Content-Type and charset | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="...; charset=..."> <meta charset="..."> 
          These tags define the page's content type and character set respectively. Make sure that you
          surround the value of the  | 
| refresh | <meta http-equiv="refresh" content="...;url=..."> 
          This tag, commonly called meta-refresh, sends the user to a new URL after a certain
          amount of time, and is sometimes used as a simple form of redirection. However, it is
          not supported by all browsers and can be confusing to the user.
          We recommend using a server-side
           | 
| viewport | <meta name="viewport" content="..."> 
          This tag tells the browser how to render a page on a mobile device. Presence of this tag
          indicates to Google that the page is mobile friendly.
          Read more about how to configure the  | 
| rating | <meta name="rating" content="adult"> <meta name="rating" content="RTA-5042-1996-1400-1577-RTA"> Labels a page as containing sexually-explicit adult content, to signal that it be filtered by SafeSearch results. Learn more about labeling SafeSearch pages. | 
HTML tag attributes
  HTML tag attributes
  are additional values of HTML tags that configure the parent tag. For example, the
  href attribute of the <a> tag configures the resource the anchor
  tag points to: <a href="https://example.com/"...>.
  Google Search supports a limited number of HTML attributes for indexing purposes. Attributes
  like src and href are used for discovering resources such as images
  and URLs. Google also supports various
  rel attributes
  that allow site owners to qualify outbound links.
  The
  data-nosnippet attribute
  of div, span, and section tags allow you to exclude
  parts of an HTML page from snippets.
Other points to note
- 
    Google can read both HTML and XHTML-style metatags, regardless of the code used on the page.
- 
    To ensure machine readability, the headsection must be valid HTML and in case of attributes, all parent tags closed accordingly.
- 
    With the exception of google-site-verification, letter case is generally not important inmetatags.
- 
    You can use other metatags if they are important to your site, but Google will ignoremetatags that it doesn't support.
- 
    If you're considering using JavaScript to inject or change metatags, proceed with caution. We recommend that you avoid using JavaScript to inject or changemetatags whenever possible, and if you must use it, test your implementations thoroughly.
- 
    To check the metatags and attributes on your pages, use the URL Inspection Tool.
Unsupported tags and attributes
The following tags and attributes aren't supported by Google Search and are ignored. We're including them here because they're either very common in HTML or we used to support them.
| Unsupported tags and attributes | |
|---|---|
| meta-keyword tag | <meta name="keywords" content="...">The meta-keyword tag is not used by Google Search, and it has no effect on indexing and
        ranking at all. | 
| HTML tag langattributes | Google Search detects the language of a page
      based on the textual content of the page. It doesn't rely on code annotations such as the lang. | 
| nextandprevrelattribute values | <link rel="next" href="..."> <link rel="prev" href="..."> 
          Google no longer uses these HTML  | 
| nositelinkssearchbox | <meta name="google" content="nositelinkssearchbox"> 
          The  |