Airbnb Listing Title Counter
Check your Airbnb listing title fits within the 50-character limit. Only 32 characters are visible on mobile search results.
About Airbnb Title Limits
Airbnb listing titles have a 50-character maximum, but only approximately 32 characters are visible in mobile search results before the text is truncated. Since the majority of Airbnb bookings now come from mobile devices, it is critical to front-load your most compelling information within those first 32 characters. Focus on what makes your property unique rather than generic descriptions.
Tips for Writing Airbnb Titles
Keep the most important details within the first 32 characters for mobile visibility.
Lead with your unique selling point: a stunning view, central location, or special feature.
Avoid generic words like 'nice', 'lovely', or 'beautiful'. Be specific instead.
Do not include the city or area name in the title. Airbnb already shows this separately.
Use title case for a professional, polished appearance.
Avoid abbreviations that guests might not understand.
Frequently Asked Questions
Other Platform Counters
What is a Platform Character Counter?
A platform character counter is a specialised tool that shows you exactly how many characters you have used relative to the limits imposed by popular social media platforms and online services. Different platforms have different character limits: Twitter/X allows 280 characters for standard posts, Instagram captions can be up to 2,200 characters, LinkedIn posts have a 3,000-character limit, and YouTube titles are capped at 100 characters. Our platform character counter on caseconverter.co.uk displays real-time character counts for multiple platforms simultaneously, with visual progress bars that show how close you are to each limit. This helps you craft messages that fit perfectly within each platform's constraints without having to look up the limits yourself.
How to Use the Platform Character Counter on caseconverter.co.uk
Using the platform character counter on caseconverter.co.uk is simple. Type or paste your text into the input area. The tool instantly displays character counts for all supported platforms, showing how many characters you have used and how many remain for each one. Visual progress bars change colour as you approach the limit: green when you have plenty of room, yellow when you are getting close, and red when you have exceeded the limit. You can see at a glance which platforms your text fits and which ones need trimming.
When to Use a Platform Character Counter
The platform character counter is essential for social media managers, content creators, and marketers who publish content across multiple platforms. Use it when crafting posts that need to be adapted for different platforms, writing Twitter threads where each tweet must fit within the character limit, optimising meta descriptions for search engines, or preparing any text that has a specific length requirement. It saves time by showing all platform limits at once, so you can write once and quickly see where adjustments are needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which platforms are supported?
The tool shows character limits for Twitter/X, Instagram captions, Facebook posts, LinkedIn posts, YouTube titles and descriptions, TikTok captions, Pinterest descriptions, and several other popular platforms. The limits are kept up to date as platforms change their policies.
Does it count emoji as one character?
It depends on the platform. Some platforms count emoji as two characters, while others count them as one. Our tool follows each platform's specific counting rules to give you accurate results.
Can I use it for SEO meta descriptions?
Yes. The tool includes character limits for meta titles (60 characters) and meta descriptions (160 characters), which are the standard recommended lengths for search engine optimisation.
Are the character limits always accurate?
We regularly update the character limits to reflect the latest platform policies. However, platforms occasionally change their limits without notice, so we recommend checking the platform's official documentation if you are working with content that is very close to the limit.