In this post
The first thing TPT search reads on your listing is the title. The word you put first carries the most ranking weight. The word you put 90 characters in usually doesn't get indexed at all. Get this wrong and even a great resource sits on page 5 forever.
I've spent more time than I want to admit auditing my own old titles and watching listings bounce up the rankings after I fixed them. This post is the title pattern that has consistently worked in 2026, with 20 real examples from listings I've seen rank well. Use it as a checklist next time you publish.
The 80-character ceiling
TPT's search snippet cuts off titles around 75-80 characters on most viewports. Anything past that:
- Doesn't show up in search results
- Doesn't get indexed with full weight
- Gets clipped in Pinterest pins, Google previews, and most other places your title travels
Treat 80 as a hard ceiling. 70-78 is the sweet spot.
The formula
[Primary Keyword] | [Modifier] | [Grade Band] | [Format]
Within ~80 characters total. The pipe | separator is just visual cleanup; it doesn't help or hurt ranking.
The pieces:
- Primary keyword. The exact phrase a teacher would type into TPT search. Lead with it.
- Modifier. The word that narrows the search. "With Remainders," "Spring Theme," "Editable," "No Prep."
- Grade band. "Grade 4-5," "Kindergarten," "Middle School ELA." Specific is better than vague.
- Format. "Printable PDF," "Print + Digital," "Editable Slides," "No Prep."
Order matters more than people think. The first 1-3 words carry the most ranking weight. The last 2-3 are mostly for buyers scanning the page. Don't put your most important keyword last.
20 real examples that work
These follow the formula and have been ranking in 2026:
Long Division Worksheets with Remainders | Grade 4-5 | Printable PDFSpring Phonics Centers Kindergarten | CVC Words | Print + DigitalFractions on a Number Line Activities | Grade 3-4 | Math CentersHalloween Reading Comprehension Passages | Grade 3 | Print & GoTheme vs Topic Anchor Chart | Middle School ELA | Posters + WorksheetsMultiplication Fact Fluency Drills | Grade 3 | 100 Days DailySight Word Practice Pages Pre-Primer | Kindergarten | No PrepGeometry Projects High School | Constructions | PBL EditableCER Format Practice Worksheets | Middle School Science | EditableWord Problems with Decimals | Grade 5-6 | Math StationsBack to School Survey Activities | Grade 3-5 | Get to Know YouTest Corrections Reflection Sheet | Middle School Math | EditableValentine's Day Writing Prompts | Grade 2-3 | Narrative + OpinionPhonics Decodable Books Set 1 | Kindergarten | Beginning ReadersOrder of Operations Worksheets | Grade 5-6 | PEMDAS PracticeClassroom Scavenger Hunt Activity | First Day | Grade K-2Dialogue Writing Practice Pages | Middle School ELA | PunctuationAdjectives and Adverbs Anchor Chart | Grade 4-5 | PostersSTAAR Reading Test Prep | Grade 5 | Practice Passages 2026Spring Math Centers Grade 1 | Addition + Subtraction | No Prep
Mistakes I see all the time
Mistake 1: Personality words first.
Bad: "Engaging Long Division Worksheets ❤️" Good: "Long Division Worksheets with Remainders | Grade 4-5 | Printable"
The personality version sounds more like you. The search algorithm doesn't read tone. Lead with the keyword.
Mistake 2: Emojis in titles.
They don't help ranking. They render inconsistently across devices. They eat your character budget. Save them for the cover image.
Mistake 3: Hyperbole.
Bad: "BEST EVER Phonics Pack — AMAZING for K-2!" Good: "Phonics Practice Pages Kindergarten | Print + Digital"
The algorithm de-prioritizes hyperbole-heavy titles. So do experienced buyers — they read "BEST EVER" as low-effort.
Mistake 4: Creative naming over keyword clarity.
Bad: "Math Magic: Long Division Adventures for Awesome Grade 4 Kids!" Good: "Long Division Worksheets | Grade 4 | Print + Digital | Spring Theme"
Creative names hurt search. If you want to brand a series, do it inside the description. Not the title.
Mistake 5: Going over 80 characters.
Anything past 80 doesn't show in search snippets and probably isn't indexed at full weight. If you audit your existing listings, most of the older ones are too long. That's the easiest fix to make today.
Rewriting an existing title
Step by step for one listing:
- Identify the actual primary keyword. What would a teacher type into TPT search to find this resource?
- Write that keyword first. Exact match to what users type.
- Add the most relevant modifier. With Remainders, Spring Theme, Editable, etc.
- Add the grade band. Specific beats vague.
- Add format. Printable, Digital, or both.
- Count characters. Trim until you're under 80. The modifier is usually the first thing to cut if you're bloated.
The first 180 characters of the description
The title gets the heaviest ranking weight. The first ~180 characters of your description are the second-heaviest indexed surface. Buyers read further than that. The algorithm doesn't.
A pattern I keep coming back to:
[Primary keyword]is included in this[product type]for[grade band][subject]. Use these[product type]to[student outcome]. Includes[count][items].
In practice:
"Long division worksheets with remainders are included in this 24-page printable pack for grades 4-5 math. Use these division worksheets to build fluency with multi-digit problems and remainder interpretation. Includes 24 progressive practice pages, answer keys, and a fluency tracker."
That's 183 characters and includes:
- The primary keyword as exact match
- The format ("printable pack")
- The grade band
- An algorithm-readable verb phrase ("use these...")
- A specific content count (signals real value to buyers and to the algorithm)
What to skip in those first 180 characters:
- Long openers like "Hi friends! I'm so excited to share..." — wastes the indexed budget
- Bullet-point feature lists in the first paragraph — denser plain prose ranks better
- Emojis at the start — not penalized, but they eat your budget
Tags: 8-10 that matter
Tags carry minor ranking weight in 2026 but moderate weight in the "related products" surfaces TPT shows next to listings. Use 8-10 per listing:
- 3-4 long-tail variations of your primary keyword
- 2 grade-band variants ("4th grade" + "fourth grade" + "grade 4")
- 2 format variants ("printable" + "no prep" or "digital")
- 1-2 use-case tags ("centers," "homework," "test prep")
Skip the generic "fun," "engaging," "best" tags. They don't move ranking and they make the listing look spammy.
A 3-minute audit you can run on any listing
Pull up one of your existing listings. Run through this:
- Title leads with the primary keyword as exact match
- Title is under 80 characters
- Primary keyword appears in the first 180 characters of the description
- All relevant grade levels checked, not just one
- Most-specific category selected
- 8-10 long-tail tags
- Cover shows the actual content with text overlay
A listing missing 2 or more of these usually under-ranks. Fix it and re-publish. In my experience you typically see ranking lift within 2-3 weeks.
Have a title you want a second opinion on? Email hello@justniches.com — I read every one.
Related: TPT SEO 2026 Algorithm Guide · Why are my TPT sales down in 2026? · How to find low-competition TPT niches
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