SEO Setup for Cursor-Built Next.js Apps
Cursor-built apps generate functional Next.js pages without SEO metadata — pages have the default Next.js title and no descriptions. Each AI coding tool has specific patterns and limitations that create predictable issues in the apps they generate. Understanding these framework-specific gaps is the fastest path to closing your app's production readiness gaps.
What This Issue Means for Your App
Cursor-built apps generate functional Next.js pages without SEO metadata — pages have the default Next.js title and no descriptions.
The democratization of software development through AI coding tools is remarkable — but each tool's specific defaults and patterns create equally specific security and quality gaps that developers using each tool need to know.
Understanding tool-specific patterns matters because the most common vulnerabilities in any codebase come from the defaults and limitations of the tools used to build it. Addressing framework-specific issues is high-leverage work. The specific manifestation of this issue in your app depends on how your codebase is structured, but the detection and remediation steps below apply to the overwhelming majority of vibe-coded applications.
The Real-World Consequences
“Without SEO metadata, Google cannot properly index or display your pages in search results — critical for any app seeking organic traffic.”
Framework-specific issues account for a large portion of the production gaps we see in vibe-coded apps. The issue does not remain theoretical once your app has real users — whether it is a security vulnerability that gets exploited, an SEO gap that limits discovery, or a performance problem that increases churn, the business impact is measurable and preventable.
The urgency of addressing this issue scales with your user count. A pre-launch app can fix issues without any user impact. A live app needs to balance fix speed with deployment risk — which is why having automated monitoring (like Pantra's daily scans) to catch these issues before launch is far preferable to discovering them after.
Why Vibe Coders Hit This Issue
Cursor focuses on implementing described features — SEO metadata requires prompting specifically or adding as a post-launch task.
This is not a reflection of developer skill — it is a reflection of what AI coding tools optimize for. Lovable, Cursor, Bolt.new, v0, and Replit are all excellent at generating functional, working code. They are not designed to output security-hardened, SEO-optimized, production-ready applications by default. That gap is the reason tools like Pantra exist.
The solution is not to slow down your vibe coding workflow — it is to add systematic, automated checking that runs faster than you can build. A Pantra security scan takes under 60 seconds and catches issues that would otherwise take hours to find manually.
How to Detect This Issue
Before fixing, confirm whether this issue exists in your app. Use these detection methods to verify the current state:
- 1View source on each page — do they have unique titles and descriptions?
- 2Visit /sitemap.xml and /robots.txt
The fastest detection method is running a Pantra audit on your URL — the scan automatically checks for this and hundreds of other issues in under 60 seconds, providing severity-rated findings with specific fix prompts for your stack.
Step-by-Step Fix
Once confirmed, address this issue in the following order. Each step builds on the previous one — completing all steps ensures complete remediation rather than partial patching.
- 1Add export const metadata to each page.tsx file
- 2Create app/sitemap.ts with all public routes
- 3Create app/robots.ts allowing search and AI crawlers
- 4Add JSON-LD schema to key pages
After completing these steps, re-run your Pantra audit to verify the finding has been resolved. The daily monitoring feature will then alert you if the issue ever reappears due to a future code change.
Copy-Paste Fix Prompt
Copy this prompt directly into Lovable, Cursor, Claude, or ChatGPT to get an immediate, stack-specific fix for this issue. The prompt is designed to be precise enough to produce actionable code without requiring additional context.
Add SEO configuration to my Cursor-built Next.js app. Create a metadata template. Add unique title/description to each page. Generate sitemap.ts and robots.ts. Add Organization and FAQPage schema to the homepage.
Pro tip: If you have Pantra's daily monitoring enabled, each finding in your scan report comes with a pre-generated fix prompt tailored to your detected tech stack — no copy-pasting required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I prompt Cursor to add SEO?
Yes — give Cursor the specific metadata content and ask it to add metadata exports to each page. For sitemap and robots, provide the routes you want included.
How does Pantra detect this issue automatically?
Pantra's audit engine runs over 177 checks across Security, SEO, GEO, and Performance categories. This issue is detected by analyzing your app's HTTP responses, JavaScript bundle content, HTML structure, and configuration signals — all within a single scan that takes under 60 seconds.
What stack-specific fix prompts does Pantra provide?
Pantra detects your tech stack (Lovable, Cursor, Next.js, Bolt, etc.) and generates fix prompts tailored to that stack. The prompt above is a general version — Pantra's stack-specific prompts include exact file paths, component names, and framework-specific syntax for your project.
Related Issues
These issues frequently appear together with seo setup for cursor-built next.js apps. Addressing them as a group is more efficient than fixing each in isolation.
Let Pantra Find This Automatically
Scan your vibe-coded app for this issue and 176 others — security vulnerabilities, SEO gaps, GEO optimization, and performance problems — in under 60 seconds. Every finding includes a stack-specific fix prompt ready to paste into Lovable, Cursor, or Bolt.