Provide descriptive titles for web pages [F25]
Test infoPossible Results
Test info
Test for Success Criterion 2.4.2
About
Checked Elements: title
This test checks, whether the title of the web page identifies the contents or purpose of the page.
Short Description
It is important to provide a descriptive title for your web page. Titles should identify the content of the web page without requiring users to read or interpret the page. They are used in a variety of places like search results, bookmarks, title bar and tabs of user agent, or the browser history to identify the page.
How to Repair
Provide a descriptive title using the title element in the head of the page.
The title should always enable the user to distinguish different pages and identify their content.
Keep your titles simple, short and precise and
put the most specific information at the front (as the title might be cut off).
- Keep your titles simple, short and precise and
- put the most specific information at the front (as the title might be cut off).
- Don't use same titles for more than one page and and avoid unclear titles.
- Writing Better Web Page Titles
WCAG 2.0
- Principle 2: Operable
- User interface components and navigation must be operable. WCAG 2.0: Principle 2
- Guideline 2.4: Navigable
- Provide ways to help users navigate, find content, and determine where they are. Understanding Guideline 2.4
- Success Criterion 2.4.2: Page Titled (Level A)
- Web pages have titles that describe topic or purpose. Understanding: Success Criterion 2.4.2
- Technique
Possible Results
- The title of the page seems to be suspicious
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The title seems to be a default or placeholder text instead of a proper description of the content.
- The title of the page seems to be descriptive
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The title of the web page seems to describe the content.
- Please check the title of the page
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Human input is necessary to verify, that the title describes the content of the page.