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https://consumerfinance.gov

Content

· 5 checks — Internal links, mixed-content guards, Open Graph previews, and structured data rolled into one auditable list.
SCORE
85
GRADE
B
FIX
1
REVIEW
2
PASS
2
INFO
0
Checks
5
2 PASS 2 REVIEW 1 FIX
B
Open Graph
Open Graph tags are partially configured — some improvements recommended.
REVIEW
Open Graph tags are partially configured — some improvements recommended.
Critical::
og:image is not reachable
The og:image URL could not be fetched. Social platforms won't be able to display it.
Got: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/static/img/logo_open-graph_facebook.d0dedfbe1787.png
Info::
Missing twitter:card
Without twitter:card, Twitter falls back to Open Graph tags. Adding it gives you more control.
URL: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/static/img/logo_open-graph_facebook.d0dedfbe1787.png

The og:image URL could not be fetched. Social platforms won't be able to display it.

Why this matters

An unreachable og:image URL (404, DNS fail, slow timeout) means social platforms cache the failure and serve no image for hours.

Learn more

Social platforms (Facebook, Twitter) cache OG metadata aggressively — including failed image fetches. A momentarily-broken og:image can leave your shares imageless for hours. Test og:image URLs in Facebook's Sharing Debugger to force re-cache after fixing.

Source: Open Graph Protocol / Facebook Sharing Debugger

Without twitter:card, Twitter falls back to Open Graph tags. Adding it gives you more control.

Why this matters

Without twitter:card, Twitter renders posts as plain text — no preview image, no structured layout.

Learn more

Twitter requires `<meta name="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image">` (or summary) to render share-cards at all. Without it, links appear as raw text and engagement plummets vs cards. Twitter also falls back to og:image if twitter:image isn't set, so configure both.

Source: Twitter Developer Platform

Preview

consumerfinance.gov

Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Preview quality · Twitter/X D · 50/100
  • twitter:card — Add <meta name="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image">
  • twitter:title — falling back from og:title
  • twitter:description — falling back from og:description
  • twitter:image — falling back from og:image
  • twitter:card is missing

    → Add <meta name="twitter:card" content="summary_large_image">

CONSUMERFINANCE.GOV

Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Preview quality · Facebook A+ · 100/100
  • og:title — Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  • og:description — Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
  • og:image — https://www.consumerfinance.gov/static/img/logo_open-graph_facebook.d0dedfbe1787.png
  • og:type — website
  • og:url — https://www.consumerfinance.gov/complaint/
  • og:site_name — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

consumerfinance.gov

Preview quality · LinkedIn A+ · 100/100
  • og:title — Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  • og:description — Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
  • og:image — https://www.consumerfinance.gov/static/img/logo_open-graph_facebook.d0dedfbe1787.png

consumerfinance.gov

Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Preview quality · Slack A+ · 100/100
  • og:title — Submit a complaint | Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  • og:description — Find information and tools to submit a consumer complaint to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
  • og:image — https://www.consumerfinance.gov/static/img/logo_open-graph_facebook.d0dedfbe1787.png

Social preview quality

Averaged across Twitter/X, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Slack.

A · 87/100
FieldTwitter/XFacebookLinkedInSlack
og:title
og:description
og:image
og:type
og:url
og:site_name
twitter:card
twitter:title
twitter:description
twitter:image
C
Brand Presence
Action
Site-name consistency, favicon, social image, meta tags, schema, and contact signals
REVIEW

Brand Presence

Partial brand coverage — a few channels are missing brand signals.

C

60/100

Site name appears as

Page titleConsumer Financial Protection Bureau
og:site_nameConsumer Financial Protection Bureau
twitter:site
Organization.name

Consistent

Brand assets

Favicon

12/15

covers apple-touch-icon + SVG

Social share image

14/20

og:image set; twitter:image missing

Meta completeness

14/20

Organization schema

0/15

Contact info discoverable

10/10

contact page + tel link

Findings

  • Missing brand name in: twitter:site, Organization.name
  • Add twitter:image — Twitter falls back to og:image only when it's larger than 300×157
  • Add an apple-touch-icon and at least two PNG sizes (32x32 + 192x192)
  • twitter:card missing
  • No Organization schema — Google can't render your logo in the knowledge panel

How consistently your brand appears across channels — shared link previews, structured data, favicon, contact info.

A+
Mixed Content
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS.
PASS
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS.
Info::
No mixed content detected — all resources use HTTPS
A+
Structured Data
1 JSON-LD block(s) found — structured data is well configured.
PASS
1 JSON-LD block(s) found — structured data is well configured.
Info::
Custom type "VideoObject" — unable to validate specific properties

JSON-LD Blocks

Block 1 : VideoObject
8 properties Valid
{
  "@context": "https://schema.org",
  "@type": "VideoObject",
  "name": "Having a problem with a financial product or service? – consumerfinance.gov",
  "description": "Learn about the CFPB’s complaint process, and how to submit a complaint to the CFPB. Consumers’ complaints and companies’ responses provide the CFPB with insights about the types of challenges consumers are experiencing with financial products and services and how companies are responding to consumers’ concerns. Complaints support the CFPB’s work to supervise companies, enforce federal consumer financial laws, propose rules, spot and assess emerging issues, and develop tools that help empower consumers to make informed financial decisions.\n\nFor more information about the CFPB’s complaint process, visit http://consumerfinance.gov/complaint\n\nThe Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), is a U.S. government agency that makes sure banks, lenders, and other financial companies treat you fairly. Learn how the CFPB can help you at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/\n\nConnect with us: \nhttps://www.consumerfinance.gov/ \nTwitter: https://twitter.com/CFPB \nFacebook: https://facebook.com/CFPB",
  "thumbnailUrl": [
    "https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bh3nejWtSjA/default.jpg",
    "https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bh3nejWtSjA/mqdefault.jpg",
    "https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bh3nejWtSjA/hqdefault.jpg",
    "https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bh3nejWtSjA/sddefault.jpg"
  ],
  "uploadDate": "2022-01-11T20:55:23Z",
  "duration": "PT3M27S",
  "embedUrl": "https://www.youtube.com/embed/bh3nejWtSjA?enablejsapi=1&origin=https://www.consumerfinance.gov"
}
All checks on this page are automated. Results are estimates - run targeted manual reviews when the score affects a release decision.

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