If you work with WordPress, sooner or later you install Yoast SEO. That has been the case for ten years. You click "Install plugin", you see the green light under your post, and you think: "Done. I'm doing SEO now."
That is not quite true. Yoast is not an SEO tool. Yoast is an editor helper for meta tags and snippets. Those are different things.
This post shows you where Yoast stops, what yourseo adds on top, and why the full package ends up cheaper than the premium licence of a plugin that only covers part of the job.
What Yoast actually does
To keep the comparison fair: Yoast does a few things well.
- You get input fields for title tag and meta description right inside the post editor.
- A snippet preview shows how your post will look in the search results.
- A readability check complains about long sentences and passive voice.
- A focus keyword is checked against title, URL and body text.
- XML sitemaps and schema.org markup are generated automatically.
This is useful, but limited in scope. It covers exactly one step of the SEO workflow: filling in a single page. What happens before (finding keywords, understanding competitors) and what happens after (tracking rankings, finding technical issues, monitoring backlinks) sits entirely outside what Yoast does.
That is where the trouble starts.
Where Yoast stops
I have seen this play out a hundred times. Someone runs WordPress, installs Yoast, every post shows a green light. Traffic still does not move. The question that follows is always the same: "Why is my SEO not working?"
The answer is usually the same too. Yoast checks whether your focus keyword shows up in the title. Yoast does not check whether anyone searches for that keyword in the first place. Yoast checks whether the meta description is filled in. Yoast does not check whether you are stuck on page three, where nobody will ever read that description.
What Yoast cannot do:
- No rank tracking. You never find out where you actually rank for a keyword. Not even in the premium version.
- No keyword research. Search volume, competition, related terms? You fetch them somewhere else.
- No competitor analysis. You cannot see what your competition ranks for.
- No technical audit beyond the current post. Yoast checks the page you are editing. Broken internal links on another page, a misconfigured robots.txt, duplicate content across the domain: invisible.
- No backlink overview. Who links to you matters for SEO. Yoast does not know.
- No integration with Google Search Console. The data that really counts lives in a separate browser tab.
- No review widgets. Trust signals on the page? Different plugin.
- WordPress only. The moment you spin up a landing page in Webflow, a Shopify store or a custom Next.js front-end, you start from scratch.
This is not meant as an attack. Yoast was built as a WordPress extension in 2008 and that is still what it is. It is good at what it does. It just does very little.
What yourseo delivers instead
yourseo was not designed as a plugin. It was designed as a standalone SEO platform. You connect a site (WordPress, Webflow, Shopify, custom code, it does not matter) and you get the entire workflow in one dashboard.
1. Technical SEO audit across the full domain
The yourseo SEO audit crawls your site and checks more than 30 factors. Not only the one page you are editing right now, but every relevant URL on the domain. You see issues like:
- Missing or duplicate title tags (details here)
- Broken internal links and redirect chains
- Images without alt text
- Mobile rendering issues
- Page-speed problems pulling down your Core Web Vitals
- A robots.txt or canonical setup that blocks the wrong things
- Duplicate content risks
- Missing or invalid schema.org markup
Findings are sorted by severity. You do not get a flat list of 200 hints that you never work through. You get a prioritised list that tells you: "This first, then this, then this."
Yoast shows you a traffic light per post. yourseo shows you the health of your entire website.
2. Rank tracking based on real Google data
yourseo connects directly to your Google Search Console. That means your rankings are not estimates pulled from a third-party keyword database. They are the actual positions Google served last week, together with click-through rate, impressions and the ratio between them.
You see changes per day, per week, per month. You can tell whether a Google ranking update hit your traffic or whether you are catching up. You spot keywords that are about to break onto page one, and posts that are slipping and need a refresh.
None of this exists in Yoast. Not even in the premium version.
3. Keyword research that ends inside the dashboard
Instead of switching between three tools, you do the research in yourseo right next to your existing rankings. You see:
- Search volume per keyword and country
- Competition strength on a clear scale
- Related terms you should cover in the same piece
- Opportunity keywords where you could jump to page one with little effort
- Real click share that organic results capture (after subtracting ads and SERP features)
Research results feed straight into your visibility dashboard. A keyword turns into a post, the post turns into a position, the position turns into a measured click. Full loop, in one place.
4. Competitor analysis without an extra subscription
In yourseo you enter a competitor domain and see:
- Which keywords they rank for and you do not
- Where you both rank, but they sit higher
- Which posts pull traffic for them
- Which backlinks they have built
That is the information you build a content strategy on, instead of writing posts in the dark.
5. Review widgets for your own site
A feature that simply does not exist in Yoast: Google review widgets. You can embed your real Google reviews on any page, as a badge or as a carousel. WordPress, Webflow, plain HTML, all supported. The effect on conversion rate is measurable, especially for local businesses.
6. Platform independent
Yoast is locked to WordPress. The moment you launch a subdomain on Webflow, a Shopify store or a Framer landing page, you start from zero.
yourseo works with any site that lives on the open web. You verify the domain once, that is it.
7. GDPR and EU hosting
yourseo is hosted in Germany. No data leaves the EU, no Schrems II conversation with your data protection officer. Yoast is Dutch, so also EU, but premium cloud features pull on US infrastructure.
The price comparison that stings
This is where the picture gets uncomfortable. Yoast Free is, well, free. That is true. But the moment you want more than the basics, you need Yoast SEO Premium. And Premium is licensed per site.
| Tool | Entry | Premium / Pro | Multiple sites |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yoast Free | $0 | basic fields only | install separately per site |
| Yoast Premium | about $99 per year per site | synonyms, internal linking, redirects | pay for every site |
| yourseo Free | $0 | real audit + snapshot widget | 1 site |
| yourseo Starter | $5 per month | audit, rankings, keywords | 1 site |
| yourseo Pro | $39 per month | + competitor, backlinks | 4 sites |
| yourseo Agency | $199 per month | + API, white label, reviews | 17 sites |
Do the maths. Yoast Premium runs at about $99 per year. Per site. Three WordPress projects, that is roughly $297 per year. In return you get a few extra fields for synonyms and a redirect manager.
yourseo Pro runs at $39 per month, around $468 per year. In return you get four sites, technical audit, rank tracking, keyword research, competitor analysis, backlink monitor and review widgets. The feature gap is not slightly wider. It is a different league.
The Pro plan also replaces several separate tools at once: a rank tracker (usually $25 and up per month), a keyword database (usually $49 and up), an audit tool (usually $49 and up) and a review widget plugin ($9 to $29). Bought separately, you end up north of $130 per month. yourseo does it for $39.
"But Yoast has a readability score"
True. In most cases that score is a style opinion, not an SEO factor. Yoast flags sentences longer than 20 words and warns about passive voice. Those rules come from English press-release training material, not from the Google Webmaster Guidelines.
Google itself says nothing about sentence length. What matters is whether your content matches the search intent behind the query. Yoast does not measure that. Nobody measures intent with a rule-based traffic light.
If you want a real content check, look at which keywords the post is already collecting (in Search Console), which it could collect (with keyword research), and whether the post has a sensible internal structure. yourseo does all of that. A red dot saying "Your text contains too many passive sentences" does not.
When Yoast is still enough
To keep this honest: there are situations where Yoast is plenty.
- You run one single WordPress site that you rarely touch.
- You only want to fill in title and meta description.
- You do no active SEO, you just want to "cover the basics".
- You do not care about rankings, so you do not need tracking.
That is a valid position. In that case Yoast Free is fine. The moment you want to know whether your effort is working, you need more.
Migration: do I have to uninstall Yoast?
No. Yoast and yourseo do not step on each other. Yoast writes meta tags into the HTML of your WordPress site. yourseo crawls that HTML, audits it, tracks your rankings and gives you the overview on top.
You can keep Yoast Free for the convenience of editing meta tags inside the post editor, and run yourseo alongside to see what those meta tags actually produce. You no longer need Premium: redirects are better handled on the server or via a lean redirect plugin, internal linking hints come out of the yourseo audit, and synonyms are something Google figures out on its own.
Bottom line
Yoast did its job back when WordPress was the only publishing tool in town and SEO basically meant "fill in a meta tag". Neither of those things has been true for years.
A modern website rarely lives on a single platform. SEO today means watching rankings, finding keywords, knowing your competition, fixing technical issues, surfacing trust signals, reading Search Console data properly. Yoast handles one slice of the first task. yourseo handles all of them.
If you start today, start with the yourseo Free plan and the SEO audit. It costs you nothing and gives you an honest read of your site in under two minutes. If you want more after that, Starter is under $5 per month. In the same time, Yoast Premium would have added three new fields.
Still want to stay in the plugin world? No drama. Keep Yoast Free for the editor convenience and run yourseo next to it. You lose nothing, and you gain everything Yoast was never built to do.