Quick summary
New to OG images? Read the Open Graph image guide first.
OpenGraph.xyz is a closer comparison than a generic design tool. It has dynamic OG image automation, a WordPress plugin, site audits, template creation, and branded sharing links.
MyOG.social makes a narrower bet. I give it the page URL, add one crawler-facing image tag, and let it build a card from the page content and brand signals it can detect. I do not want to map template variables before every page can get a usable image.
Feature comparison
| Feature | MyOG.social | OpenGraph.xyz |
|---|---|---|
| Setup model | One meta tag | Plugin or SaaS setup |
| Input data | Page URL | Page URL + template fields |
| Template editor | No | |
| Automatic page analysis | ||
| WordPress plugin | ||
| Site audit workflow | Checker-focused | |
| Custom share links | Preview receipt links | |
| Template routing rules | Template-level | More control |
When I would use MyOG.social
- You want a crawler-safe OG image URL that works from an existing page URL.
- You care more about getting every page covered than designing a template system first.
- You want the same setup to work on WordPress, static sites, docs, product pages, and custom apps.
- You want the checker to lead naturally into a managed site-wide fix.
When I would use OpenGraph.xyz
- You want an editor for branded dynamic templates.
- You need to map fields differently by content type, category, tag, or post type.
- You want broader metadata tooling around audits, AI titles, AI descriptions, or custom sharing links.
- You are comfortable with a SaaS/plugin workflow where template setup is part of the product.
Setup comparison
MyOG.social Setup
MyOG.social keeps the page as the integration point. The social crawler reads `og:image`, requests the MyOG image URL, and gets an image generated from the URL being shared.
I can add it to a layout, theme, plugin, or shared head component without building a template editor workflow first.
<meta property="og:image" content="https://api.myog.social/og?url={yourURL}" />OpenGraph.xyz Setup
- Create or connect an OpenGraph.xyz account.
- Install the plugin or add the SaaS integration.
- Create, choose, or generate a branded template.
- Map template variables to page or WordPress fields.
- Choose how templates should apply across content types.
- Verify the generated `og:image` output and crawler behavior.
Cost comparison
OpenGraph.xyz is positioned as a broader social metadata and dynamic image platform, so the cost should be judged against template control, audits, AI metadata tools, sharing links, and WordPress automation.
MyOG.social pricing is easier to evaluate when the job is narrower: turn existing page URLs into branded OG images with less setup.
Check the current MyOG.social pricing and the vendor's pricing page before making the call. Pricing changes more often than implementation details.
The bottom line
OpenGraph.xyz fits teams that want a template system and broader social metadata workflow.
MyOG.social fits the narrower job: the page URL should be enough input, and every shared page should get a better image.
Sources I checked
Related resources
- OG Meta Tags Guide — all the tags you need to set
- OG Preview Tool — test your social card before publishing
- OG Image Generator — create one image by hand
- MyOG.social vs @vercel/og — compare MyOG.social with @vercel/og
- MyOG.social vs Cloudinary — compare MyOG.social with Cloudinary
- MyOG.social vs Bannerbear — compare MyOG.social with Bannerbear
- MyOG.social vs Placid — compare MyOG.social with Placid
Try MyOG.social Free
See what your OG images would look like from a URL before changing your site.
Already have an account?