Word Counter for SEO
Check title tags, meta descriptions, and on-page copy before search results cut them short or readers drop off.
- ✓Review title tags, meta descriptions, and body copy with the same tool
- ✓Useful for metadata QA and on-page SEO editing
- ✓Helps balance snippet fit, readability, and content depth
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What Is an SEO Word Counter?
SEO copy has practical length constraints long before rankings enter the conversation. Title tags, meta descriptions, headings, and body sections all need enough room to say something useful without turning into keyword-heavy clutter. This page helps you check display length, reading load, and whether the copy still sounds like it was written for people rather than for a template.
This tool checks length and readability signals. It does not predict rankings, replace keyword research, or tell you whether the page deserves to rank for a target query.
How to Use This SEO Word Counter
- 1Check your title tag
Paste your page title into the text area and check the character count. Aim for 50–60 characters. Under 50 and you're wasting available real estate. Over 60 and Google will truncate it in search results. This is especially useful here for reviewing snippet fit and search readability.
- 2Check your meta description
Paste your meta description and check character count against the 150–160 character range. Descriptions over 160 characters are truncated with ellipses in most search result layouts, cutting off your call-to-action. This is especially useful here when reviewing snippet fit, search readability, and keyword restraint.
- 3Check content word count
Paste your full page body copy and check word count. For informational and commercial content targeting competitive keywords, aim for 1,500–2,500 words. For local landing pages, 500–800 words is often sufficient. On this page, that helps reduce SEO-specific clarity issues.
- 4Check reading time for content strategy
Reading time correlates with content depth. A 7-minute reading time (1,400 words) signals comprehensive coverage — which Google tends to reward for informational queries. On this page that usually reveals SEO-specific clarity issues faster. This is usually where SEO-specific clarity issues become easier to notice.
- 5Iterate and recheck
Edit your copy in the tool and recheck until all your key metrics — title, description, word count — are within their target ranges. That makes it easier to decide whether the version is already ready to publish.
If the copy fits every benchmark but still feels thin, the issue is topical depth or intent match, not the character count.
SEO copy problems are often not about raw length but about fit. A title can technically fit the range and still waste space on weak wording, while a meta description can hit the count but promise nothing useful.
A practical check: if the copy sounds built around the keyword instead of the user need, the page is already weaker than the count suggests.
This differs from email or social copy. SEO text has to survive both display constraints and intent matching, not just speed of reading.
Reality Check: If you ignore this in SEO writing, the page can look optimized in a checklist and still feel thin, repetitive, or low-value in search and on-page reading.
When Not to Use This Tool
Do not use this page as a substitute for search intent work. If the page is targeting the wrong query or solving the wrong problem, cleaner counts will not fix that.
Who Uses It & Why
SEO Specialists and Consultants
Useful for quick QA on title tags, descriptions, and intro copy before a page goes live or enters a content review workflow.
Content Writers and Copywriters
Helpful when a draft meets the brief on paper but still needs tighter headings, cleaner descriptions, or less obvious keyword repetition.
Web Developers and Site Owners
Useful for metadata checks when you are updating pages directly in a CMS and need a fast sanity check before publishing.
Digital Marketing Agencies
Helps agencies review client deliverables for length, readability, and snippet fit before sending work out the door.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the ideal length for an SEO title tag?
- Title tags should be 50–60 characters for optimal display in Google's search results. Under 50 characters typically means the title isn't using available space to include a primary keyword and compelling description. Over 60 characters and Google truncates with '...' in the SERP snippet, cutting off the end of your title — usually where the unique differentiator or brand name lives.
- What is the ideal meta description length?
- Meta descriptions should be 150–160 characters. Google doesn't use meta description as a ranking signal directly, but a well-written meta description improves click-through rate from search results — which does influence rankings indirectly. Descriptions over 160 characters are truncated, typically cutting off the call-to-action at the end.
- How many words should an SEO article be?
- For most competitive informational keywords, the top-ranking content contains 1,500–2,500 words. This isn't a rule Google states — it's an observed correlation between content comprehensiveness and ranking performance. For low-competition local pages, 500–800 words is often sufficient. For pillar pages targeting broad topics, 3,000–5,000 words can be appropriate. Check word count here to ensure you're in the right range for your target query. That matters even more when evaluating snippet fit, search readability, and keyword restraint. Local processing matters even more here when checking snippet fit and search readability.
- Does Google still truncate meta descriptions at 155–160 characters?
- Google dynamically generates search snippets and sometimes overrides the meta description with content it considers more relevant to the query. However, when Google does use the meta description as written, it typically displays 150–160 characters in standard search layouts. Writing within that range gives you the best chance that your written description is what appears, untruncated.
- Is this SEO counter free?
- Yes — completely free, no login needed, unlimited use. Check as many titles, descriptions, and articles as you need. On a page like this, that is useful when checking snippet fit, search readability, and keyword restraint. That is especially useful when you need SEO review without extra friction.
- Does word count directly affect Google rankings?
- Word count is not a direct ranking factor — Google has stated that length alone does not determine quality. However, comprehensive content that thoroughly covers a topic tends to be longer because it covers more ground. The correlation between word count and ranking reflects that comprehensive coverage tends to result in longer content, not that length itself causes ranking improvement. Aim for the word count that covers your topic completely, then stop.
- What if the title and description fit perfectly but the page still underperforms?
- That usually points to intent mismatch, weak differentiation, or shallow body content rather than a metadata-length issue.
SEO Limits & Benchmarks
Pro Tips
Write your title tag last
Titles are easier to tighten once the angle of the page is clear. Writing them last usually reduces vague or overstretched phrasing.
Include your primary keyword in the first 50 characters of the title
You do not need to stuff the title, but you should make the topic obvious early. Clear topic framing beats decorative phrasing.
Use meta descriptions to set expectation
A good description explains what the page offers and why the result is worth the click. Repeating keywords without a payoff wastes the snippet.
Check readability as hard as you check length
A compliant title and description do not help much if the body copy reads like keyword scaffolding. If the text sounds robotic, rewrite before trimming.
Review meta and body copy separately
Snippet copy and page copy have different jobs. Treat them as separate checks instead of assuming one strong draft solves both.
Bad vs Good
Bad
Best SEO Tool for SEO Titles and SEO Content Optimization | Brand
Good
SEO Word Counter for Titles, Meta Descriptions, and Page Copy
Decision Rule
If the wording fits the limit but says little, rewrite before trimming. If the text repeats the keyword without adding clarity, simplify it.
Common Mistake
Why it fails: Writers often optimize to the visible limit and forget that search users still need a clear promise and clean wording.
How to fix it: Use length as a constraint, then write for intent, clarity, and page usefulness before you worry about squeezing in more terms.
Trust Signal
This reflects how good SEO pages are actually judged: by usefulness, clarity, snippet fit, and on-page depth together rather than by count alone.