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    Word Counter & SEO Analyzer

    Count words, analyze readability with Flesch-Kincaid, check SEO score, and optimize keyword density. Professional content analysis for writers and marketers.

    No signup. 100% private. Processed in your browser.

    Paste your text to get word count, readability scores, SEO analysis, and keyword density — all calculated locally for privacy.

    Professional content analysis for writers and marketers.

    Words

    0

    Characters

    0

    Reading Time

    0 min

    SEO Score

    60/100

    Characters (no spaces)

    0

    Sentences

    0

    Paragraphs

    0

    Speaking Time

    0 min

    Avg Word Length

    0 chars

    Avg Sentence Length

    0 words

    Character Limits

    Twitter/X0 / 280
    LinkedIn Post0 / 3,000
    Instagram Caption0 / 2,200
    Meta Title0 / 60
    Meta Description0 / 160

    Content Writing Tips

    • Blog posts: 1,500-2,500 words for SEO
    • Keep sentences under 20 words for readability
    • Aim for Flesch Reading Ease of 60-70
    • Use subheadings every 300 words

    How Word Counting Works

    A word counter works by splitting your text at whitespace boundaries — spaces, tabs, and line breaks — and counting each resulting token. That sounds simple, but edge cases matter: hyphenated words like "well-known" are typically counted as one word by most processors (including Microsoft Word), while contractions like "don't" count as one word, not two.

    Our tool goes beyond basic counting. It also analyses characters (with and without spaces), sentences (split at full stops, question marks, and exclamation marks), and paragraphs (separated by blank lines). These metrics feed into the readability and SEO scores.

    Reading time is calculated at 200 words per minute (the average adult silent reading speed) and speaking time at 150 words per minute (average conversational pace). Both are approximations — your actual speed depends on content complexity and familiarity with the subject.

    Recommended Word Counts by Document Type

    There's no universal "right" length — the best word count depends on your format, audience, and purpose. Here are research-backed guidelines used by professional writers and content strategists:

    Document TypeWord Count
    Tweet / X post1–70
    Instagram caption50–150
    LinkedIn post100–300
    Email subject line6–10
    Meta description20–30
    Blog post (short)800–1,200
    Blog post (SEO)1,500–2,500
    Pillar / guide3,000–5,000+
    Landing page300–800
    Product description100–300
    Academic essay1,500–5,000
    Cover letter250–400
    Resume / CV400–800

    Understanding Readability Scores

    Readability formulas estimate how easy your text is to understand. They're based on measurable features — sentence length, syllable count, and word complexity — rather than subjective judgment. Our tool calculates four industry-standard scores:

    Flesch Reading Ease

    Scores 0–100. Higher = easier. Aim for 60–70 for general web content. Below 30 is academic-level difficulty.

    Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level

    Maps to US school grades. A score of 8.0 means an 8th-grader could understand it. Most web content should target grade 6–8.

    Gunning Fog Index

    Estimates years of formal education needed. Penalises long sentences and complex (3+ syllable) words more heavily than Flesch.

    SMOG Index

    Simple Measure of Gobbledygook. Considered the most accurate for health and technical writing. Requires at least 30 sentences for reliability.

    Important: Readability scores are guidelines, not rules. Technical writing for specialists will naturally score lower than blog posts for general audiences. The goal is to match your audience's reading level, not to chase a number.

    Step-by-Step: Analysing Your Content

    Let's walk through a real example. Say you've written a blog post draft and want to check if it's ready to publish:

    1. Paste your text into the input area. The word count, character count, and reading time appear instantly in the stats bar.
    2. Check the Stats tab for sentence count, paragraph count, and average sentence length. If your average sentence length exceeds 20 words, consider breaking some longer sentences up.
    3. Switch to Readability to see your Flesch Reading Ease score. For a blog post targeting a general audience, aim for 60–70. If you're below 50, look for jargon and complex phrasing you can simplify.
    4. Review the Insights tab for passive voice instances, adverb overuse, and long sentences. These aren't errors — they're signals. A few passive constructions are fine; a dozen in 500 words suggests your writing could be more direct.
    5. Check SEO for content length warnings, structural issues, and optimisation suggestions. The score accounts for word count, readability, and paragraph structure.
    6. Review Keywords to see your most-used terms and their density. If your target keyword isn't in the top 5, you may need to incorporate it more naturally. If it's above 3%, you may be over-optimising.

    The character limits section at the bottom is useful if you're repurposing content for social media — it shows exactly how your text fits within Twitter/X, LinkedIn, Instagram, and meta tag limits.

    Common Mistakes Writers Make

    Writing to a word count instead of a reader

    Padding content with filler to hit a target word count hurts readability and SEO. Every sentence should add value. Google rewards depth, not length.

    Ignoring readability for professional content

    Even B2B and technical content benefits from clear writing. Studies show executives prefer content written at an 8th-grade level — it's faster to scan and easier to act on.

    Keyword stuffing

    Repeating your target keyword excessively (above 3% density) can trigger search engine penalties. Use natural variations, synonyms, and related terms instead.

    Skipping the editing pass

    First drafts are always too long. Professional writers typically cut 15–25% during editing. Use the Insights tab to find passive voice, adverbs, and long sentences to tighten.

    Not checking character limits before posting

    Truncated tweets, cut-off meta descriptions, and Instagram captions that hide your CTA behind 'more' all reduce engagement. Check limits before you publish.

    Treating readability scores as absolute rules

    A medical paper should score differently than a children's story. Match the score to your audience. The Flesch score is a guide, not a grade.

    Tips for Better Writing

    Use the inverted pyramid

    Lead with the most important information. Readers decide in seconds whether to continue. Put your key point in the first paragraph, then expand with supporting detail.

    Write short paragraphs

    On screens, long paragraphs create walls of text that readers skip. Keep paragraphs to 2–4 sentences (under 100 words). Use subheadings every 200–300 words to create visual anchors.

    Prefer active voice

    "The team completed the project" is clearer and shorter than "The project was completed by the team." Active voice makes your writing more direct and engaging.

    Cut ruthlessly

    Remove "very," "really," "just," "that," and "in order to" on sight. Replace weak verb + adverb combos ("ran quickly") with strong verbs ("sprinted"). Shorter is almost always better.

    Read it aloud

    If you stumble over a sentence when reading aloud, your reader will too. The speaking time estimate helps you gauge how your content flows at a natural pace.

    Word Count and SEO: What Actually Matters

    There's a persistent myth that longer content automatically ranks higher. The reality is more nuanced. Google's algorithms evaluate content quality, relevance, and user satisfaction — not raw word count. A 500-word article that perfectly answers a search query will outrank a 3,000-word article that buries the answer in fluff.

    That said, comprehensive content tends to perform well because it naturally covers more subtopics, answers more related questions, and earns more backlinks. The sweet spot for most blog content is 1,500–2,500 words — long enough to be thorough, short enough to hold attention.

    Key SEO writing principles that actually matter:

    • Search intent match — Does your content answer what the searcher is actually looking for?
    • Structured content — Use headings (H2, H3), short paragraphs, and bulleted lists for scannability.
    • Internal linking — Connect related content to help search engines understand your site's topical authority.
    • Readability — Content written at grade 6–8 level gets more engagement and lower bounce rates.
    • Natural keyword usage — Include your target keyword in the title, first paragraph, and a few subheadings. Keep density at 1–2%.

    Use the SEO tab in our analyser to check these factors automatically, then refine based on the suggestions.

    Related Tools

    Why Choose Forge Word Counter?

    Unlike Grammarly, ProWritingAid and Hemingway Editor, Forge Word Counter offers a genuinely free, private, and unlimited experience with no strings attached.

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    Last updated: January 2026 • Built with care by iForge Apps

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    How to use this tool

    1

    Paste or type your text in the input area

    2

    View real-time word count and statistics

    3

    Check the Readability tab for Flesch-Kincaid scores

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