Good, with the biggest opportunities in content quality and performance.
Last reviewed April 2026 by TheFreeSEOToolKit editorial workflow.
What a finished SEO audit report looks like
This sample shows the kind of output a user can expect after checking a page: a clear score, the most important categories, a short action plan, and links into the next workflow.
Summary snapshot
The page topic is understandable, but the title and main heading do not make the search intent obvious enough.
The page loads acceptably, but text compression and script weight can still be improved.
Action plan example
Canonical tag is present, HTTPS is working, and the page is crawlable. Sitemap inclusion should be checked if the page is important.
Add more original examples, answer the query earlier, and make the page type clearer in the first screen.
Use the thin-content upgrade brief if the page needs a rewrite, then compare the page again after changes.
What the audit example demonstrates
This example shows how the main audit report turns page-level checks into a readable fix plan. It is designed to help users understand score movement, category warnings, and the difference between urgent fixes and lower-impact polish.
A useful audit should not overwhelm the user with a flat list of issues. It should make the next action clearer, explain why the issue matters, and help the user decide what to fix first.
Gives a quick read on broad page quality.
Groups findings by metadata, content, technical setup, links, and performance.
Prioritises improvements that are most likely to matter first.
Use this example carefully
This sample shows how an audit result is organised. Run your own page through the audit to get the specific checks, priorities, and next steps for that URL.