WordPress Image Alt Text: The Complete 2026 Guide

WordPress Image Alt Text: The Complete 2026 Guide

Updated April 2026. By the ImageSEO Team. ~8 min read.

This guide was originally published in 2021, back when “image alt text for SEO” meant writing a keyword-stuffed sentence so Google Images would rank your page. Since then, everything changed. Google Lens became the #1 visual search surface. ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity started citing pages based on image descriptions. WordPress still ships with empty alt text by default. This is the 2026 rewrite — everything you actually need to know, nothing you don’t.

The 30-second version

  • Alt text is the single most undervalued SEO lever on WordPress in 2026.
  • WordPress does not auto-fill alt text on upload. You have to do it manually, or use a tool that does it for you.
  • Good alt text is a natural-language description (under 15 words) that sounds like a photo caption in a magazine — not keyword stuffing.
  • Alt text powers four things at once: Google Images ranking, Google Lens visual search, AI search citations (ChatGPT/Claude/Perplexity), and WCAG accessibility compliance.
  • If you have more than 100 images in your media library, writing alt text by hand is not a realistic strategy. Use ImageSEO.

What alt text is, in 2026 terms

Alt text (the alt attribute on an <img> tag) is the text description a computer reads when it can’t see the image. In 2021, “computer” mostly meant Google’s crawler and screen readers for visually impaired users. In 2026, it means all of that plus:

  • Google Lens — now accounts for roughly 12 billion visual searches per month. Uses alt text as a primary signal.
  • ChatGPT with vision — reads alt text to confirm what it’s looking at before citing your page in an answer.
  • Claude with web search — uses alt text to decide whether to quote an image’s context in its responses.
  • Perplexity — its image-heavy search results rank based partly on how well your alt text matches the user’s query.
  • Pinterest visual search — still a top 5 referral source for photography, travel, and e-commerce.

How to write alt text that ranks in 2026

Rule 1: Describe the image like you’d describe it on a phone call

Close your eyes. Someone asks you what’s in the photo. What do you say? That’s your alt text. “Red leather handbag on a marble table, luxury boutique product photography.” Not “red leather handbag red handbag leather bag shop buy”.

Rule 2: Under 15 words, under 125 characters

Screen readers cut off at ~125 characters. Google truncates snippets at about the same length. If you need more, use the <figcaption> element for extended description and keep the alt attribute short.

Rule 3: Never write “image of” or “photo of”

Screen readers announce the element as an image already. “Image of a red handbag” becomes “image, image of a red handbag”. Just write “Red handbag on marble”.

Rule 4: Include context that matters for ranking

What are you optimizing for? Google Images ranks by relevance to search queries. If the image is on a product page for a wedding dress, the alt text should include “wedding dress” somewhere. If it’s on a travel blog about Paris, include “Paris”.

Rule 5: Don’t repeat what’s already in the caption

If you already have a visible caption under the image, the alt text should be a shorter summary, not a duplicate. Screen readers and Google both read both.

How to add alt text to WordPress images

Three ways, from slowest to fastest:

Method 1: Manually, one image at a time

  1. Go to Media → Library in your WordPress admin.
  2. Click any image to open it.
  3. Fill in the “Alternative Text” field in the right sidebar.
  4. Press “Update”.
  5. Repeat 1,000 times for a typical site. Give up halfway.

This works for tiny sites. It does not scale.

Method 2: Using a Yoast / RankMath “reminder”

Both Yoast and RankMath can highlight images without alt text in their page analysis panel. This is a reminder, not a fix. You still have to write the alt text yourself.

Method 3: Automated with AI (ImageSEO)

ImageSEO is a free WordPress plugin that writes alt text for you using vision AI trained specifically on SEO intent. Install from the WordPress.org directory, connect your account, scan your media library — done. The plugin handles single images, bulk backfill, new uploads, and multilingual sites automatically. See pricing.

Alt text for special cases

Decorative images (spacers, dividers, background textures)

Use alt="" (empty string, not missing attribute). This tells screen readers to skip the image. Do NOT use “decorative image” or “spacer” as alt text.

Logos

Use the company name. “Nike logo” is correct. “Nike swoosh brand icon logo” is keyword stuffing.

Product images in WooCommerce

Include the product name, key attributes (color, material, size), and the category. “Red leather handbag, medium, with gold clasp, boutique collection”. See our WooCommerce page for a specialized guide.

Charts, graphs, infographics

Describe the data, not the image. “Chart showing 23% increase in Google Images traffic after alt text optimization over 3 months”. Screen reader users need the data, not the visual.

Photographs of people

Describe relevant attributes (clothing, setting, action) but not ethnicity, age, or gender unless it’s directly relevant to the article topic. “Woman speaking at a tech conference” is fine. “Young Asian woman” is usually not what screen reader users want.

The alt text mistakes we see most in 2026

  1. Empty alt on every product photo — WordPress default, kills WooCommerce SEO.
  2. Keyword stuffing — Google ignores it, ChatGPT downrates it.
  3. “Image of…” — screen readers hate it.
  4. Duplicate alt text for every image on a page — Google treats it as doorway content and penalizes.
  5. Missing alt attribute entirely — worse than empty. Breaks HTML validation.
  6. Writing alt text only in English for multilingual sites — French / German / Spanish readers see English alt text. Your hreflang is lying to Google.

Measuring alt text SEO impact

The fastest way to see alt text paying off:

  1. Open Google Search Console → Performance → filter by Search type: Image.
  2. Note your current “Image” impressions and clicks.
  3. Optimize alt text across your media library.
  4. Wait 2–4 weeks for Google to re-crawl.
  5. Compare. Image impressions usually climb 30–100% in the first month after a full alt text backfill.

For ChatGPT / Claude / Perplexity citations, there’s no dashboard yet. The proxy metric is referral traffic from chatgpt.com, claude.ai, and perplexity.ai in Google Analytics. Those numbers typically climb 2–4 weeks after an alt text overhaul.

The complete 2026 stack for image SEO on WordPress

Alt text is one piece of the picture. For a full walkthrough of the three silent SEO killers on modern WordPress sites (broken sitemap, blank alt text, untranscribed video), see our 2026 SEO stack guide.

FAQ

Does Google still rank based on alt text in 2026? Yes, more than ever. Google Images, Google Lens, and Google Discover all weight alt text as a primary signal for image-driven queries.

Can I use AI to generate alt text? Yes, and in 2026 most large sites do. The key is using AI trained specifically for SEO, not generic captioning models. ImageSEO is built for this.

Will auto-generated alt text hurt my SEO? Only if it’s generic or stuffed with keywords. Good AI alt text (natural, specific, human-sounding) outperforms most hand-written alt text because humans get bored writing it and AI doesn’t.

What’s the difference between alt text and the title attribute? Alt text is a description for when the image can’t be seen. The title attribute is a tooltip shown on hover. Google uses alt; it mostly ignores title.

How long should alt text be? Under 15 words, under 125 characters. Long enough to describe the image precisely, short enough that screen readers don’t truncate it.

Questions? Write to us. We reply fast.

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