I recently came across the [tag:multiple] tag, which I'd like to see burn. The main reason is that it's not a programming concept, thus not on-topic for the site. The tag has 194 questions, 54 followers (somehow), no wiki or excerpt, and there's virtually no commonality between questions on this tag. ---------- __Burnination criteria:__ _Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?_ I'd say no, it often doesn't describe the questions at all. _Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?_ No here also, the concept of single vs multiple is pretty much a core concept that can be applied to anything, but I wouldn't consider it on-topic _Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?_ Nope, you often can't deduce anything about the information in the question by seeing this tag. _Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?_ I'd say yes here, but that doesn't make it a good tag. ---------- **In response to what the benefit from burninating this tag is:** I think the main benefit is that existence of such a tag encourages wrongly using tags, making posts harder to find. Tags should reflect the categories in which the question falls, and not be a description of the question. Take for example [this question](https://stackoverflow.com/q/49893040/7296893) tagged _excel-vba rows value multiple split-apply-combine_. Due to the many tags that are more descriptive, it's maxed at 5 tags and missing the [tag:excel] tag, thus missing followers on that tag. Of course, there are many more examples, (non-Excel too). These were two both posted this week. [This one](https://stackoverflow.com/q/49830669/7296893) doesn't have either [tag:excel] or [tag:excel-vba], thus Excel users won't find the question. It's maxed at 5 tags, and imo only the first one helps the question get found. ---------- I think since the tag adds so little to the questions, it will be relatively low effort to burn this tag. We can just do a cleanup, and then remove the tag from the remaining questions, without having to worry about finding alternative tags.