WordPress Categories vs Tags: What They Are, Why They Matter for SEO, and When to Leave Them Alone

By CJ Price
A macbook keyboard and screen up close

If you’ve ever opened a blog post in WordPress and seen the words “Categories” and “Tags,” you may have thought:

  • Do I really need to touch those?
  • Am I doing this wrong?
  • Can’t I just write and move on with my day?

Fair questions! Categories and tags are tiny features with big impact, and when they’re used well, they help both Google and your site visitors find and navigate your content.

But when they’re misused (or worse, overused) they can create clutter, confuse search engines, and make your blog harder to manage long-term.

Let me show when to use them them, when to skip them, and why SEO loves a clean, intentional structure!

Categories: Your Blog’s Big Buckets

Categories are the big-picture themes your blog covers. Think of them like the aisles in a hardware store: they organize content by major topics so readers (and Google) can easily explore what’s available.

Example: Plumber’s Blog

Good Category Examples:

  • Plumbing Basics
  • Common Repairs
  • Water Heaters
  • Emergency Plumbing
  • Seasonal Maintenance

If you’re writing a post called “5 Things That Could Be Causing Your Low Water Pressure,” that would fall under Common Repairs — because that’s the big topic it fits into.

SEO Tip:

  • Use 1–2 categories max per post
  • Don’t create new ones unless they cover 3+ blog posts
  • Every blog post must have a category — so don’t leave it as “Uncategorized”!

Tags: The Details That Tie It All Together

Tags are the smaller, more specific labels that describe what’s inside the post. Think of them like the product labels on shelves — they help people find exactly what they’re looking for across different categories.

Same Post Example:

“5 Things That Could Be Causing Your Low Water Pressure”

  • Category: Common Repairs
  • Tags: low water pressure, faucet issues, pipe leaks, water-saving tips

Now, imagine you have another post about “Why You Should Replace Old Copper Pipes” — and you tag it with pipe leaks too.

Over time, your site builds a small collection of posts all related to pipe leaks — even if they live in different categories. That’s super helpful for users and for SEO.

So, Why Do Tags & Categories Matter for SEO?

When used intentionally, tags and categories do the following:

  • Help Google understand the structure of your content
  • Make it easier to show related posts and improve internal linking
  • Create archive pages (e.g. “All posts about Water Heaters”) that can be optimized and indexed
  • Keep your blog from becoming a messy, unsearchable pile of content

The Danger of “Set It and Forget It” Tags

Here’s the trap: tags sound small and harmless. But in WordPress, every tag you create becomes its own archive page — whether you want it to or not.

If you throw 10 random tags on every post just to “cover your bases,” you’re actually creating:

  • Dozens of thin-content archive pages (bad for SEO!)
  • A confusing user experience
  • A clean-up headache later

Example of What Not to Do:

Post 1: “How to Fix a Running Toilet”
Tags: toilet, water, dripping, fix, hardware, emergency, plumber, leak, home, rush

Post 2: “Winterize Your Pipes Before a Freeze”
Tags: winter, freeze, cold, pipe, frozen, faucet, outside, January, hose, insulation

All of those tags are too specific, too scattered, or redundant. And none of them are helping Google or your readers.

Be Intentional — or Leave Tags Alone!

If you’re ready to strategically use tags — go for it. But only if:

  • You can reuse tags consistently across multiple posts
  • You’re ready to optimize tag archive pages with custom intros and keywords
  • You’re using tags to build SEO clusters or internal link structures

If not? Skip tags for now. Focus on writing great posts, assigning the right category, and let us (or your SEO team) help when it’s time to scale!

Final Thoughts (and a Simple Rule)

Categories = big themes
Tags = reusable details

Use both only when you have a clear reason to do so!

If you’re a business owner writing blog posts between client calls, you don’t need to overthink this — but you do need to keep things clean. Your future self (and your SEO performance) will thank you.

Need Help Cleaning Up Your Tags & Categories?

Whether you’ve never touched your categories or you’ve got 94 random tags with one post each… we can help!

Contact Ivingo Creative and we’ll audit your blog structure, clean things up, and build a system that supports your content strategy and SEO goals!

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Founder CJ of Ivingo Creative

Hey! I’m CJ.

I like to call myself a “Website Architect,” aka your go-to for building websites that work harder, not just look pretty.

Before starting Ivingo Creative, I was running a tent + event rental company with my husband (yes, the full wedding/festival chaos). I taught myself how to get us to the top of Google, and realized I was more into strategy than setup.

Now I help small business owners and service pros build websites with structure and substance — grounded in SEO, conversion strategy, and content that actually connects.

When I’m not mapping CTAs or yapping about SEO or conversion strategies, I’m off-grid with my family, a strong marg, and a break from my screen.

Let’s make your website the most strategic part of your business so you can take a break, too.

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