Accessibility check
Alt Text Checker
Review whether an alt-text draft is too short, too vague, or too wordy.
Free tool
Uses 0 Credits
Live utility
Review image descriptions for usefulness
Alt text should do real work. It should describe the image clearly enough to support accessibility while still reflecting the purpose of the page. This checker helps you review whether your alt text feels empty, repetitive, or over optimized. That is useful for product images, featured images, service diagrams, and local content where image context can reinforce page quality.
Good for accessibility and content polish
Many teams either ignore alt text or stuff it with keywords. Neither approach is ideal. This tool gives you a faster way to spot weak descriptions before they are published. Better alt text helps users with assistive technology, makes image libraries easier to manage, and supports a more polished overall presentation across the site.
Image context is part of the page experience
Alt text alone will not drive rankings, but it contributes to the completeness and care people feel when using a site. When the surrounding content is already strong, better image descriptions help reinforce that quality. Use this checker with metadata, heading, and schema review when you want the page to feel more fully finished.
Frequently asked questions
These answers are specific to this tool, how it fits into RankAndWrite, and how to get better output from the workflow above.
What does Alt Text Checker review?
It reviews the quality of image descriptions so you can see whether the alt text is useful, clear, and more appropriate for the page.
Why is alt text worth checking on an SEO site?
Because image context and accessibility both contribute to the completeness and professionalism of the page.
Should alt text be stuffed with keywords?
No. Alt text should describe the image naturally and only reflect keywords when they genuinely match the visual content.
Who uses this tool most often?
Content teams, ecommerce teams, local businesses, and publishers use it when they want image libraries to support page quality more consistently.
What goes well with Alt Text Checker?
Open Graph Preview Tool and page level content QA are good follow-ups when the goal is a more polished overall asset.