Is Alt Text Important for SEO? What WordPress Users Need to Know
Yes! alt text matters for SEO. But most WordPress users either ignore it completely or optimize it the wrong way. Alt text is not just a checkbox for accessibility. It is one of the few on-page SEO signals you can improve in bulk, directly inside WordPress, without touching a single line of code. This guide covers exactly what Google does with alt text, where the real SEO impact lies, and how to audit your entire media library in minutes.

Yes — alt text matters for SEO. But most WordPress users either ignore it completely or optimize it the wrong way. Alt text is not just a checkbox for accessibility. It is one of the few on-page SEO signals you can improve in bulk, directly inside WordPress, without touching a single line of code. This guide covers exactly what Google does with alt text, where the real SEO impact lies, and how to audit your entire media library in minutes.
The Short Answer
Alt text — the alt attribute on your image tags — does three things that directly affect your site's performance in search:
- Helps Google understand what an image shows
- Enables your images to rank in Google Images
- Reinforces the topical relevance of your page
- Satisfies WCAG 2.1 accessibility requirements
- It does not directly boost your page's Google ranking
- It is not a replacement for quality content
- Stuffing keywords in alt text can trigger a penalty
- It does not compensate for slow loading images
The nuance matters. Alt text is a signal, not a lever. Used correctly, it unlocks image search traffic and strengthens topical clarity. Used incorrectly, it creates accessibility failures and signals keyword stuffing to Google.
Why Google Actually Cares About Alt Text
Google's crawlers cannot interpret images the way a human can. They rely on surrounding text, the page context, the filename, and especially the alt attribute to understand what an image represents. In Google's own documentation on image SEO, alt text is listed as a primary signal for image indexing.
This matters more than most site owners realize because image search is not a niche channel.
For a WordPress site with hundreds of images, poor alt text is not just an accessibility gap. It is a measurable loss of image search traffic that your competitors may already be capturing.
The 4 Alt Text Issues That Actually Hurt SEO
Not all alt text problems have the same impact. Here is how each issue affects your search visibility.
When the alt attribute is absent, Google has no textual signal to associate with the image. The image may still appear in search results based on filename and surrounding content but it will rank far below images with proper alt text. Missing alt text is also a WCAG 2.1 Level A failure, which means your site does not meet the baseline accessibility standard required by the European Accessibility Act (June 2025).
Generic alt text ("image", "photo", "logo", "icon") provides a signal — but a useless one. It tells Google the file type, not the content. More importantly, generic alt text is technically present, which means your site will not flag it as "missing." It hides the problem while leaving the SEO value on the table. Filikod specifically detects generic alt text in a dedicated audit tab, separate from missing alt text.
Duplicated alt text is the most underrated issue. It happens when multiple images share the same description common on e-commerce sites with product variants, or when alt text is auto-generated from a template without customization. From Google's perspective, duplicate alt text signals that your images are interchangeable and provides no additional information about any individual image.
Alt text written for search engines instead of users is not a gray area. Google's image SEO guidelines explicitly state that alt text should describe the image for users, not list keywords. Stuffed alt text can suppress your image rankings and flag your page for over-optimization.
Alt Text and the European Accessibility Act (2026)
Since June 2025, the European Accessibility Act requires digital content published in the EU to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Alt text on images is an explicit requirement under Success Criterion 1.1.1.
This changes the risk profile of alt text from an SEO optimization to a compliance obligation. Sites that fail to provide meaningful alt text for informational images are technically non-compliant, with fines that can reach €500,000 depending on jurisdiction. The deadline for existing content is June 2030.
How to Write Alt Text That Helps SEO
The rule is simple: write for a person who cannot see the image, then check that it naturally includes the relevant context. If it reads like it was written for a search engine, rewrite it.
| Image type | SEO-optimized alt text pattern |
|---|---|
| Product image | [Color] [Material] [Product name] [Key variant or size] |
| Blog post image | [What is shown] in context of [article topic] |
| Screenshot | [Software name] [screen/section] showing [key element] |
| Chart or graph | [Chart type] showing [metric] and [key result] |
| Logo (standalone) | [Brand name] logo |
| Logo (as link) | [Brand name] homepage |
| Decorative image | alt="" (empty, intentional — screen reader skips it) |
One practical rule: keep alt text under 125 characters. Screen readers often truncate longer strings, and search engines do not give additional weight to lengthy alt text.
How to Audit Your WordPress Alt Text
Knowing the rules is step one. The harder part is identifying which of your existing images already have problems — and fixing them at scale. WordPress does not provide a native alt text audit. Most plugins that generate alt text automatically do not flag issues with existing alt text.
Filikod was built specifically to solve this. It scans your entire media library and assigns an ALT Quality Score from 0 to 100, categorizing every image by issue type: missing, generic, duplicated, or too short.
- Install Filikod from the WordPress plugin directory it works on your existing media library without any setup.
- Open the ALT Audit tab. You will see your images sorted by issue type. The score gives you an immediate benchmark.
- Fix by priority. Start with Missing (hardest SEO impact), then Generic, then Duplicated. Edit directly inline no external tool or spreadsheet required.
- Re-run the audit after fixing to confirm your score improved and no new issues were introduced.