AEO Engine free tool

Free Favicon Checker for SEO and AI Search

The Favicon Checker tests whether a site exposes a reachable favicon across the surfaces buyers actually see: browser tabs, bookmarks, Google search results, iOS home-screen shortcuts, Android/PWA manifests, and AI-search brand journeys. It checks declared icon tags, root favicon.ico fallback, Apple touch icons, manifest icons, reachability, declared sizes, and Google-readiness signals, then turns gaps into plain-English fixes.

Who this tool is for: Built for SEO teams, web agencies, founders, and developers who need to confirm a site's visible brand identity is not broken before a launch, migration, redesign, or technical SEO handoff.

What this tool measures

  • HTML rel=icon declarations for ICO, PNG, SVG, mask, and browser icons
  • Root /favicon.ico fallback availability and response quality
  • Apple touch icon presence for iOS home-screen shortcuts
  • Web app manifest icons for Android and PWA surfaces
  • Google search favicon readiness signals, including square crawlable assets and declared sizes
  • Browser, mobile, and AI-search brand surface coverage
  • Copy-paste website widget with AEO Engine attribution

How it works

  1. Enter a public website URL
  2. The checker fetches the page HTML and parses favicon, Apple touch icon, mask icon, and manifest declarations
  3. It checks icon paths for reachability and image-like responses
  4. It scores browser, Google, Apple, and manifest readiness
  5. Review the fix list or run the full AEO report for broader visibility issues

Why it matters for AI search and revenue

Favicons do not rank pages by themselves, but they are one of the most repeated brand signals users see while scanning tabs, bookmarks, mobile shortcuts, and search results. A broken favicon can make a site look unfinished, and the same head-template drift often points to broader technical visibility issues like stale manifests, missing schema, weak titles, blocked assets, or crawlability problems.

How AEO Engine executes beyond the tool

AEO Engine fixes the broader technical visibility layer: favicon and manifest hygiene, schema markup, sitemap and robots setup, title and H1 clarity, SSL/crawlability checks, and the answer-ready content that helps brands get found, understood, cited, and recommended in Google, ChatGPT, Grok, Claude, Gemini, and Google AI Overview.

Use cases and examples

  • Check whether a new site launch still serves /favicon.ico instead of returning a 404 or HTML shell
  • Find missing Apple touch icon and manifest icons before mobile users save a site to their home screen
  • Validate whether declared icon sizes are likely ready for Google search result display
  • Turn broken icon paths into developer-ready fixes for a CMS, headless frontend, or static site
  • Use the embeddable widget on web design, CMS, or agency resource pages

Comparison and alternatives

Generic favicon tools usually stop at file presence. AEO Engine adds a search and AI-visibility lens: Google readiness, mobile/PWA coverage, technical head hygiene, related SEO checks, and a managed execution path when the favicon issue is only one symptom of a larger visibility system problem.

FAQ

What does this favicon checker test?

It checks declared HTML icon tags, root favicon.ico fallback, Apple touch icons, web app manifest icons, reachability, declared sizes, and Google search readiness signals.

Why is my favicon not showing in Google Search?

Common causes include an icon URL returning 404 or HTML, a blocked homepage or icon file, an unsupported or non-square icon, missing higher-resolution sizes, or Google's favicon cache not refreshing yet.

Does a favicon directly improve SEO rankings?

No. A favicon is not a primary ranking factor. It supports brand recognition, search-result trust, browser usability, and click confidence, which makes it useful technical SEO hygiene.

Can this tool guarantee Google will show my favicon?

No. The checker evaluates likely readiness signals, but Google controls whether and when a favicon appears in search results.

What favicon files should most sites publish?

A practical baseline is a root favicon.ico, a declared SVG or PNG icon, an apple-touch-icon PNG, and manifest icons such as 192x192 and 512x512 for Android/PWA surfaces.

Next step

Check whether your favicon is declared, reachable, Google-ready, mobile-ready, and visible across browser and AI-search journeys. Free favicon checker with fixes.

Check your favicon