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multiple Title Tags

When a page has more than one <title> element, search engines may pick the wrong one (typically the first) — producing unexpected results in SERPs and breaking your carefully-crafted title.

warning Impact: high TITLE_MULTIPLE 2 min read Updated

Why it matters

When a page has more than one <title> element, search engines may pick the wrong one (typically the first) — producing unexpected results in SERPs and breaking your carefully-crafted title.

Schedule a fix in your next sprint. Warnings won't block your site but they consistently leave performance on the table. Estimated SEO impact: high — direct effect on rankings or impressions.

How to fix

  • Keep only one <title> element in <head>
  • Remove duplicates injected by plugins / CMS templates
  • Audit build output — sometimes a theme injects a second title

Common causes

If the rule is firing across many pages, the root cause is almost always one of these:

  • Templating engine emits an empty value when the page-level metadata field is null.
  • New pages inherit a placeholder ("Untitled", "Lorem ipsum") that was never replaced before publish.
  • CMS plugin overrides the metadata field after the theme sets it, with the plugin value missing.
  • Server-side rendering and client-side hydration disagree, leaving the wrong value in the static HTML.

Anti-patterns to avoid

Even with the best intentions, these "fixes" make the issue worse — recognise them so you don't ship them:

  • Copy-pasting the same title/description across templated pages.
  • Leaving raw template syntax ({{title}}) in the production HTML.
  • Letting auto-generated metadata override hand-written values.

How atlookup detects this

Our crawler renders each page with a real headless browser, then parses the document <head> and URL shape, applying the M8.T terminology audit rules. Pages where the rule fires for multiple title tags are flagged on the report.

If you'd like to see this rule fire on your own site, run a free 60-second audit — every page is reported with the exact lines that triggered it.

Tools to verify the fix

Once you've applied the fix, double-check with these external validators:

  • Google Search Console — Confirms how Google currently sees your title/description in SERPs.
  • Lighthouse — Catches missing or duplicate metadata across pages.

Frequently asked questions

Why does Multiple Title Tags matter for SEO?

When a page has more than one <title> element, search engines may pick the wrong one (typically the first) — producing unexpected results in SERPs and breaking your carefully-crafted title.

How do I fix multiple title tags?

Keep only one <title> element in <head> Remove duplicates injected by plugins / CMS templates Audit build output — sometimes a theme injects a second title

Is this a critical SEO issue?

Schedule a fix in your next sprint. Warnings won't block your site but they consistently leave performance on the table. Estimated SEO impact: high — direct effect on rankings or impressions.

How does atlookup detect multiple title tags?

Our crawler renders each page with a real headless browser, then parses the document <code>&lt;head&gt;</code> and URL shape, applying the M8.T terminology audit rules. Pages where the rule fires for multiple title tags are flagged on the report.

How long does it take to fix?

5–15 minutes per page. Most teams batch similar issues across templates so the per-page time goes down at scale.