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Google May Exclude Emojis from Meta Titles & Descriptions in Search Results

While Google does support emojis in search results, it may choose to filter them out in certain situations.

The topic of emojis in search results came up during a recent Google Webmaster Central hangout with John Mueller.

A site owner was concerned about emojis not appearing in search after being added to his site’s meta descriptions.

Googlebot seems to have recognized the new meta descriptions, displaying everything except the emojis.

The site owner was particularly frustrated because emojis were appearing in a competitor’s meta descriptions, but not his.

So, what’s the issue here?

Mueller explains that there are two different aspects to this problem.

Why Google May Not Display Emojis in Search Results

Google does support emojis in search results; however, they will only be displayed when considered relevant to the query.

Mueller provided several reasons why Google might filter emojis out of a meta title or description.

Emojis may be filtered out if:

– They’re considered misleading
– They look too spammy
– They’re simply out of place

Site owners should remember that Google does not always display exactly what is provided as a meta title or description.

Search results can end up being displayed in different ways depending on the query.

Therefore, you might find that emojis appear for some searches but not for others.

With all of that said, there is nothing inherently wrong with using emojis in meta titles and descriptions.

Just don’t expect them to appear in search results 100% of the time.

The full question and answer can be heard in the video below (starting at 1:04:06):

“There are two aspects there. We don’t always show exactly what is listed in the description and title. So that might be playing a role there.

With regard to emojis, we also filter some of these out in the search results. So, in particular, if we think that it might be misleading, or looks too spammy, or too out of place, then we might be filtering that out.

So depending on what you’re showing, and what you’re seeing otherwise in the search results, if the same emoji is being shown in other sites, then we could be able to show it for your site as well.

It’s probably just a matter of us picking up the title and description and actually showing that to users.”

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