Analyze word count, reading time, readability, SERP preview, and keyword density in real time. Everything runs in your browser.
Runs in your browser. Nothing stored.
Paste your content, blog post, or article to see live metrics: word and character counts, reading and speaking time, Flesch readability, content length guidance, heading detection, and keyword insights—all without leaving your device.
Add content with complete sentences to see readability.
Thin content
Consider adding more depth (300+ words).
0/60
0/155
Your page title
everydaytools.pro › example
Your meta description appears here in search results.
Add more content (non-stopwords) to see top keywords and prominence.
Content metrics analysis measures your text for clarity, length, and structure. Tools like this one count words and characters, estimate reading and speaking time, and score readability (e.g. Flesch Reading Ease). For SEO, you also care about content length, headings, and how keywords are distributed. Analyzing these metrics helps you align copy with both readers and search engines—without guessing.
There is no single “best” length; it depends on topic and intent. As a guide: under 300 words is usually thin for a main page; 300–800 works for short updates or product copy; 800–1,500 is a solid range for most blog posts and articles; 1,500+ suits in-depth guides and pillar content. Match length to what users and the query expect, and ensure the content fully answers the question.
Use shorter sentences (aim for under 20–25 words on average), break long paragraphs (under 150 words), and prefer common words where possible. Add subheadings (H2, H3) to structure the page. Vary sentence length for rhythm. If your Flesch score is low, simplify phrasing and cut jargon. These changes make content easier to read and can support better engagement and SEO.
For most blogs, 800–1,500 words works well. Long-form guides (1,500+) can rank for competitive topics. Short posts (300–800) are fine for news or product updates. Avoid thin content under 300 words for important pages.
There is no fixed rule; search engines use many signals. A natural density of 0.5–2% for a focus keyword is often cited. Prioritize readability and topical relevance over hitting a specific percentage.
Reading time helps users decide if they have time to read. It also reflects content depth. Showing an estimate (e.g. “5 min read”) can improve engagement and reduce bounce.
No. This tool runs entirely in your browser. Your text is never uploaded or stored. All metrics are computed locally for your privacy.
Use shorter sentences and simpler words where possible. Break long paragraphs. Aim for a score of 60+ for general audiences; 70+ is considered easy to read.
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