Blog Post SEO Grader
A blog post earns nothing if search engines and AI assistants cannot parse it, and converts nothing if it ends without a next step. This grader checks the on-page SEO foundations of your post: a strong title, a real meta description, a single H1 with a clean heading hierarchy, a canonical tag, and that the page is actually indexable.
It also grades the post for AI answer engines, which increasingly summarize content directly. We check whether your key text is in server-rendered HTML, whether section headings are written as the questions people ask, whether you give direct answers under them, and whether the post contains specific, citable facts an assistant can safely quote.
What this audit checks
- ✓Title tag length and quality, plus a present meta description
- ✓One H1 with a clean H2 and H3 hierarchy crawlers can follow
- ✓Page is indexable, with no accidental noindex blocking traffic
- ✓Key content is in server-rendered HTML, not JavaScript-only
- ✓Headings written as real questions, with direct answers underneath
- ✓Specific, citable facts and enough extractable depth to be quotable
Who it’s for
Content marketers, SEOs, and bloggers who want posts that rank in search and get cited by AI assistants.
You’ll get a Revenue Grade, all nine subscores, and your top fixes free — with the full ranked plan and downloadable report available on upgrade.
See what’s includedFAQ
- Does this grade my whole blog or one post?
- One post at a time. You submit a single public URL and we grade that page. Run your most important posts through it first, then work down by traffic or revenue priority.
- What makes a blog post citable by AI assistants?
- Content in plain, server-rendered text, headings phrased as the questions people ask, a direct one-to-three-sentence answer under each, and specific facts like numbers, dates, and named sources. We grade this as readiness; no tool can guarantee an AI cites you.
- Why does a blog post need a CTA in a revenue grade?
- Traffic without a next step is wasted. We check whether the post offers a path forward, such as a related offer or capture, so a ranking post can actually contribute to revenue rather than just pageviews.
Related guides
- Why do generic website graders miss AI search readiness?
- How to write a high-converting headline
- What is the average ecommerce conversion rate by industry?
More free graders
Results are automated guidance, not guarantees of revenue, rankings, or AI visibility. See our AI Output Disclaimer.