Why won't Google use my meta description?

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Solution 1

This is by design and is how Google works.

It does not necessarily use the meta description in the SERPs if it thinks other text on the page is more relevant to what the user has searched for.

Solution 2

(My answer from your cross-posted (and now closed) question.)

Google shows your meta-description if they think it’s useful for the searching user.

See Google’s documentation (bold emphasis mine):

Google will sometimes use the meta description of a page in search results snippets, if we think it gives users a more accurate description than would be possible purely from the on-page content.

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Html Tosin
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Html Tosin

Updated on September 18, 2022

Comments

  • Html Tosin
    Html Tosin over 1 year

    I have an issue with my website: Google isn’t using my meta description, instead it’s using the content of the web page and I’m really confused.

    Reason I’m confused is because I have checked and I don’t have duplicate page titles, description nor keywords, neither do I have any robots.txt for my website.
    My page title, description and keyword is unique, and page description is about 150 characters.

    I have my site in Google Webmaster Tools and I checked for errors, but found none.

    So I really don’t know why Google Search isn’t using my meta description.

    • Html Tosin
      Html Tosin over 9 years
      I actually searched for what is in my title and description on google search and my site did not show up on Google, until i typed text that are in web page content.
    • MrWhite
      MrWhite over 9 years
      The META description is not used to index your site. It is only used in the SERPs, unless other page text is deemed more relevant.
    • unor
      unor over 9 years
      Please don’t cross-post.
  • Html Tosin
    Html Tosin over 9 years
    Isn't there something i can do about that ?
  • MrWhite
    MrWhite over 9 years
    Unfortunately not, unless perhaps your META description does not already relate directly to the on-page content? Are you suggesting that the snippet that Google is displaying is wholly inaccurate? Usually it is related to what the user has searched for, highlighting words in the content. The snippet displayed in the SERPs will often change depending on the search phrase.
  • Html Tosin
    Html Tosin over 9 years
    And then thats my problem, because most users will rather type in "buy History books" on their browser than a particular Author's book
  • MrWhite
    MrWhite over 9 years
    To be honest "Buy history books" is very generic (almost spam-like) so it is not surprising your site is going to struggle getting indexed for those keywords - it's very competitive. But are users really going to search for something vague like "buy history books", rather than the specific item they are searching for?
  • MrWhite
    MrWhite over 9 years
    ...but also, if the TITLE does not relate directly to the page content (ie. you're not discussing "buying history books" in the general sense) it's not going to carry the weight you hope it will.
  • closetnoc
    closetnoc over 9 years
    @HtmlTosin For the record. The description meta-tag is indexed, but little to zero weight is given to the words contained within it. But it is used for matching. You can do a site: search and Google will likely use the tag. But for user searches w3d is right. Google will return the most relevant match. However, your description meta-tag, if done well, should match most of the time. It should contain your most important keywords (that people actually use) and some long-tail keywords. It sounds like all you need to do really is tune it up a little to make it more relevant.