Listing Character Limit Checker
Real-time check for Amazon Listing character limits to avoid truncation or indexing rejection.
Amazon enforces strict character limits on every listing field. Exceed these limits and Amazon will truncate your title in search results, reject your bullet points during feed upload, or silently drop search terms from the backend index. The consequences are immediate and lasting: a truncated title loses the last words your customer needed to identify the product; search terms beyond 250 bytes are entirely ignored by Amazon's indexing engine regardless of how relevant they are. The Listing Character Limit Checker gives you a real-time, field-by-field count—title characters, bullet character counts, search term byte count, and description characters—before you publish. Whether you are drafting your first ASIN or auditing an existing catalog of hundreds of listings, knowing your exact position against each limit is the first step to a structurally sound Amazon listing.
Amazon Listing Field Limits Explained
Amazon specifies character or byte limits for each listing field, and these limits differ by category, marketplace, and account type. The standard character limits for most categories are: Title—200 characters (some categories restrict to 80 or 150); each Bullet Point—500 characters, with a maximum of five bullets; Product Description—2,000 characters when using the description field (A+ Content replaces this for brand-registered sellers); Search Terms—250 bytes total (not characters—multibyte Unicode characters count for more than one byte). The byte distinction for Search Terms is particularly important. The standard ASCII characters used in English each count as one byte, so 250 bytes equals 250 characters for English-only text. However, if you mix in accented characters, symbols, or non-Latin scripts, each can count as two or three bytes, reducing the effective character capacity. This tool calculates byte count for Search Terms and character count for all other fields, giving you an accurate picture of your position against each limit before publishing.
Why Character Limits Affect Search Indexing and Conversion
Character limits are not arbitrary formatting rules—they directly govern what Amazon indexes and what shoppers see. When a title exceeds its limit, Amazon truncates the visible string at the limit boundary, which can split a word mid-character or cut off the most important product attribute. Truncated titles reduce click-through rates because they look unprofessional and incomplete in search results and on sponsored placements. For Search Terms, the 250-byte backend keyword field is entirely binary: Amazon reads it up to the byte limit and discards everything beyond. If your most important long-tail keyword falls in the portion that exceeds 250 bytes, it receives zero indexing weight. Similarly, bullet points that exceed 500 characters may be rejected during catalog upload, leaving the bullet blank or showing an error in Seller Central. Every violation is a silent tax on your listing's discoverability and conversion. Checking character counts before publishing costs under a minute—fixing an indexed listing with wrong search terms can take days and carries ranking recovery risk.
Best Practices for Staying Within Limits Without Sacrificing Quality
Working within Amazon's character limits while maintaining compelling, keyword-rich copy requires deliberate editing. For titles, prioritize the most important product identifiers—brand, product type, key feature, size or quantity—in the first 80 characters, since that portion is most consistently displayed across devices and placements. Use the remaining characters for secondary attributes, but always confirm the final string fits within your category's specific title limit. For bullet points, lead each bullet with the primary benefit in the first 30 characters so it is visible even if Amazon renders a truncated preview. Structure each bullet around a single feature-benefit pair and aim for 200–400 characters for optimal readability and indexing. For Search Terms, remember to separate words with spaces (not commas or semicolons), avoid repeating words already in the title or bullets since Amazon deduplicates across fields, and skip brand names and ASINs as they are excluded by policy. Use this checker in your standard listing creation workflow: draft in your preferred tool, paste each field here, verify the counts, then copy the finalized text to Seller Central. Pair it with the Keyword Density Analyzer to ensure your core keywords appear with appropriate frequency across the full listing text.
How to Use the Listing Character Limit Checker
- Paste your product title into the Title field. The character counter updates in real time, showing the current count against the 200-character limit. A yellow indicator warns you when you approach the limit; red indicates you have exceeded it.
- Enter each bullet point in the five Bullet Point fields. Each bullet allows up to 500 characters. Watch for the warning indicator and trim or restructure bullets that exceed the limit before copying them to Seller Central.
- Paste your backend Search Terms into the Search Terms field. The counter displays byte count (not character count) since Amazon's backend enforces a 250-byte limit. Trim keywords starting from the lowest-priority terms until the byte count is within the limit.
- Paste your product description into the Description field. The limit is 2,000 characters for the standard description field. If you use A+ Content, this field may not be indexed by Amazon, but it is still worth checking if you maintain a text description.
- Review all fields for any warnings or over-limit indicators, finalize your text within the limits, then copy each field to Seller Central. Re-check after any edits, since even removing a word can shift byte counts in Search Terms.