AI Product Description Generator
Turn a product name, a few details, or a photo into a full product page — description, feature bullets, and SEO meta description — ready to paste or import into your store.
Your product page copy appears here
A full description, scannable feature bullets, and an SEO meta description — with word counts and a keyword check. Save products as you go and export them in one CSV.
Writing product page copy...
Description
Feature bullets
Meta description
may truncate in Google results
Saved products
Nothing saved yet. Generate a description and hit Save product — work through your catalogue, then export everything as one CSV ready to paste into your store.
· words ·
products written. Want to know which ones actually sell?
Metorik shows revenue, profit, and customer behaviour for every product in your WooCommerce or Shopify store — so you can put your best copy on your best sellers.
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Use toolWriting product descriptions for a whole catalogue is nobody's idea of fun
You know the product. You just don't want to write the same “premium quality, perfect for everyday use” line forty more times — and you definitely don't want to do it again for the meta description.
That's the job this tool takes off your plate. Give it a product name and a few rough specs — or just drop in a photo — and it writes the full set: a description in your chosen tone and length, scannable feature bullets, and an SEO meta description that fits Google's limit. Save each product as you go and export the lot as one CSV when you're ready to update your store.
What makes a product description actually sell?
A good description does two jobs at once: it helps a shopper decide, and it helps Google understand. The decision part is mostly about specifics — material, fit, what it's for, what problem it solves — written for a real person rather than a spec sheet. Vague superlatives are invisible; concrete details like “packs into its own pocket” or “rated to -10°C” are what people actually act on.
The two structural things that consistently help: lead with the benefit, then back it with the spec, and break the key features into bullets so a skimming shopper gets the gist in two seconds. This generator does both — a written description for the readers who want the story, bullets for the ones who don't.
How long should a product description be?
Long enough to answer the obvious questions, short enough that nobody scrolls past it. For most products that's somewhere around 100–200 words: enough room for a benefit-led opening, the details that matter, and the bullets, without padding. Simple, familiar products can go shorter; technical or considered purchases usually earn the longer version. The Length toggle gives you short, standard, and detailed so you can match the product rather than a word-count rule.
Don't forget the meta description
The meta description is the grey text under your link in Google results. It doesn't directly change your ranking, but it heavily influences whether anyone clicks — and a page can rank well and still get skipped because its snippet is blank or cut off. Keep it under about 160 characters so Google doesn't truncate it, work your main keyword in once, and treat it as ad copy for the search result. This tool writes one for every product and shows a live character count so you know it'll fit before you paste it in.
Using your product keyword without sounding like a robot
If you've got a keyword you want the product to rank for — “lightweight down jacket”, say — it should appear in the description and the meta description, naturally, a small number of times. Stuffing it in ten times does nothing good; modern search is perfectly capable of understanding a page that mentions its topic once or twice like a human would. When you give this tool a target keyword it works it in and then checks it actually landed, so you're not guessing.
Turning a photo into a description
If you've got the product photographed but not yet written up — which, for most stores adding new stock, is exactly the situation — you can skip the typing and drop the image straight in. The tool reads what's visibly there, like colour, material, style, and shape, then writes from that, combined with any notes you add. It won't invent specs a photo can't show, so for anything technical — fabric weights, dimensions, certifications — add those as a quick note and let the photo handle the rest.
FAQs
Is it free?
Yes — no signup, no email wall. The copy is yours to use, and your saved products live in your browser with one-click CSV export.
Can it write from a photo?
Yes. Drop in a product image and it reads colour, material, and style from the photo, then writes the description, bullets, and meta description. Add a note for anything the photo can't show, like exact specs.
Will the descriptions be unique?
Each one is generated fresh from your inputs, so no two come out identical — but the more specific your details, the more distinctive the result. Two stores describing the same generic cotton t-shirt with no extra detail will land in similar territory; your own specs, audience, and tone are what make it yours.
Does it write SEO meta descriptions too?
Yes, and it keeps them under the roughly 160-character limit Google shows, with your keyword worked in. There's a checkbox to include or skip it.
Can I bulk-write my whole catalogue?
Sort of — you generate one product at a time, but you can save each as you go and export them all in a single CSV. It's the fastest way to work through a backlog of products without a paid tool.
Will Google penalise AI-written descriptions?
No — Google's guidance is about whether content is helpful and accurate, not how it was produced. A clear, specific, genuinely useful description is fine; a thin or misleading one isn't, regardless of who or what wrote it. Treat the output as a strong first draft, check it's true to your product, and you're in good shape.
Are uploaded photos stored?
No. Photos are downscaled in your browser, sent only for the generation request, and are not saved with your products.