Slug / URL Generator
Turn any title into a clean, SEO-friendly URL slug — lowercase, hyphenated, free of stopwords and special characters. Preview the full URL and copy it in one click.
your-slug-will-appear-here
0 / 60 characters
Full URL preview
www.example.com/blog/your-slug-will-appear-here
⚠️ This slug is longer than recommended. Search engines and users generally respond better to
shorter, more scannable URLs.
What makes a good URL slug?
A slug is the part of a URL that identifies a specific page in human-readable form —
for example, in example.com/blog/best-running-shoes, the slug is
best-running-shoes. Clean slugs help both users and search engines understand
what a page is about at a glance.
Best practices for SEO-friendly slugs
- Keep it short: Aim for under 60 characters where possible — shorter URLs tend to display fully in search results and are easier to share
- Use hyphens, not underscores: Google treats hyphens as word separators; underscores can cause words to be read as one long string
- Include your target keyword: Slugs that reflect the page's main topic tend to be more descriptive for both users and search engines
- Drop unnecessary stopwords: Words like "a," "the," and "of" rarely add value to a slug and just add length
- Avoid dates and numbers that go stale: A slug like
best-shoes-2024can look outdated a year later — consider leaving the year out unless it's essential
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Q. Should I change my slug after a page is already published?
- A. Be cautious — changing a live URL can break existing backlinks and lose accumulated ranking signals unless you set up a proper 301 redirect from the old URL to the new one.
- Q. Do slugs need to exactly match the page title?
- A. No. Slugs are usually a shortened, simplified version of the title — just enough to convey the topic clearly, without every filler word from the full headline.
- Q. Does slug length directly affect rankings?
- A. There's no strict length penalty, but shorter, clearer URLs tend to get better click-through rates and are easier for both users and search engines to parse — which indirectly supports SEO.