Word Counter for SEO
Check snippet copy and page body length while keeping search intent, readability, and keyword restraint in view.
- ✓Review title tags, meta descriptions, headings, and page copy separately
- ✓Use benchmarks without treating character count as a ranking formula
- ✓Catch keyword stuffing, weak snippets, and thin body sections before publishing
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Characters (no spaces)
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Sentences
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Reading Time
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What this tool does
This SEO counter is for pages that need to satisfy search intent, not just reach an arbitrary word count. It helps you review article length, title tags, meta descriptions, headings, FAQs, examples, and body depth. The real question is whether the page would still deserve ranking if the tool, product, or template were removed.
For indexing recovery, count is only one signal. Google may crawl a page and still decline to index it if the page looks interchangeable with many others, repeats boilerplate, or fails to add useful information. This page is built to help editors inspect substance: specific use cases, original examples, mistakes, decision rules, and related resources.
Who should use it
- SEO editors, content strategists, site owners, and programmatic SEO teams recovering crawled-but-not-indexed pages.
- Writers auditing title tags, meta descriptions, FAQs, examples, and page depth before publishing.
- Teams comparing many similar pages and replacing boilerplate with page-specific usefulness.
Real-world use cases
- Use it when rewriting thin tool pages, reviewing blog drafts, checking landing pages, preparing metadata, or comparing pages in a content cluster.
- Use it when many pages share the same introduction, FAQ, or how-to copy.
- Use it before publishing a page that targets a keyword but may not yet answer the intent fully.
How it works
Paste the page copy, title tag, or meta description and review words and characters separately.
Check whether the content includes unique examples, mistakes, best practices, and internal links that match the topic.
Use character count for metadata and word count for body depth; do not judge both with the same number.
Examples
Tool page audit
Find a page with 700 words of generic copy and add tool-specific examples, mistakes, and FAQs.
Title tag trim
Shorten a title while preserving the primary query and differentiator.
Meta description
Write a description that explains the page's value without repeating the H1.
Cluster review
Compare related pages to remove reused FAQ answers and shared intros.
Content brief
Estimate whether a draft covers enough examples to compete for a query.
Common mistakes
- Adding filler paragraphs to reach a target word count.
- Reusing the same FAQ across many pages.
- Writing metadata that only restates the page title.
- Ignoring internal links that help users move to the next relevant tool.
Best practices
- Start with search intent and page differentiation.
- Write examples that could only belong on that page.
- Use FAQs for real objections, not generic keyword variants.
- Link to related tools by context, not by dumping a sitewide list.
Industry-specific applications
Programmatic SEO
Large page sets can be checked for repeated intros, duplicated FAQs, and thin sections before crawl waste compounds.
SaaS content
Feature and tool pages can be expanded with real use cases instead of generic product copy.
Marketplaces
Category pages can balance metadata, examples, filters, and buyer guidance without padding.
FAQ
- Is 1,200 words enough for SEO?
- It can be, but only if the content is specific and complete. A padded 1,200-word page can still be low value.
- Why are crawled pages not indexed?
- One common reason is that the page does not appear distinct or useful enough compared with similar pages already known to Google.
- Should every tool page have the same FAQ format?
- The format can be consistent, but questions and answers should be unique to the tool and its real use cases.
- Do internal links help indexing?
- They help discovery and context when they are relevant. Links should guide users to adjacent tasks, not exist only for SEO.
Related tools
SEO copy has to fit the snippet and the intent
Title tags and meta descriptions are not decorations. They tell searchers what the page offers before the page ever loads. Body copy has a different job: satisfy the query with enough useful, original information. This counter helps you test both constraints without pretending that a perfect number is the same as a useful page.
This tool checks length and readability. It does not replace keyword research, SERP analysis, technical SEO, or firsthand expertise.
Related: General Word Counter, YouTube Word Counter, Email Word Counter.
How to review SEO copy with counts
- 1Check the title tag
Paste the title alone and compare it with the 50-60 character range. Put the main topic early, but avoid turning the title into a list of keywords.
- 2Check the meta description
Paste the description separately and keep it near 150-160 characters. The description should clarify what the searcher gets, not simply repeat the title.
- 3Measure body copy by intent
A local service page may only need 500-800 focused words. A competitive informational guide may need 1,500-2,500 words or more. The right number depends on the query, not a universal SEO target.
- 4Look for repetition
If several paragraphs reuse the same phrase or keyword variation, the page is probably expanding count without adding information. Cut or replace those sections with examples, criteria, or edge cases.
- 5Recheck after SERP-focused edits
Metadata edits often change promise and emphasis. Recount after rewriting so the snippet still fits and the body still supports what the snippet promises.
If the count looks right but the page feels generic, add original examples, decision criteria, evidence, or use-case detail.
The strongest SEO edit often changes specificity, not length. A title can fit the range and still be forgettable; a page can be long and still fail the query.
If a paragraph could be moved to another page without changing anything, it is probably template copy.
Unlike social copy, SEO copy has two audiences at once: the searcher scanning a result and the reader evaluating the page.
Reality Check: Search quality is judged by usefulness and trust, not by whether a page reaches a fashionable word count.
When Not to Use This Tool
Do not use this as a ranking predictor or as a replacement for reviewing the live SERP and competing pages.
SEO workflows this supports
Metadata QA
SEO teams can run title and description batches through a quick length check before pages go live or are handed to developers.
Content briefs
Editors can compare a draft against the intended content type: local landing page, glossary entry, product page, or long-form guide.
Content refreshes
A stale article may not need more words. It may need fresher examples, clearer sectioning, or a better answer to the current query.
Agency delivery review
Agencies can catch titles that fit technically but waste space, and body copy that hits length while repeating generic SEO phrases.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the best length for an SEO title tag?
- 50-60 characters is a useful display range, but clarity matters more than filling every character. A concise title that names the query and differentiator is better than a longer title padded with keyword variants.
- How long should a meta description be?
- Aim around 150-160 characters when you want the written description to have a better chance of displaying cleanly. Google may still rewrite snippets based on the query.
- How many words should an SEO article have?
- There is no ranking bonus for a specific count. Use competitor analysis and search intent: a definition page might answer well in 700 words, while a buying guide may need comparisons, criteria, examples, and FAQs.
- Does Google rank longer content higher?
- Not because it is longer. Longer pages often rank when they cover a topic more completely. If extra words repeat the same idea, they can lower perceived quality instead of helping.
- Can this tool detect keyword stuffing?
- It does not calculate keyword density, but the word and sentence counts make repetition easier to notice. If the same phrase appears in the title, H1, opening, and every subheading, rewrite for natural intent coverage.
- When should I ignore the benchmark?
- Ignore it when the query needs something else: a short tool page, a data table, a calculator, a product comparison, or a local page with direct service details. Fit the search result, not the benchmark.
- What if my title and description fit but clicks are still weak?
- The snippet may be vague, mismatched to intent, or less compelling than competing results. Compare promises, specificity, and freshness, not just length.
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 Content, SEO Titles, SEO Checker and SEO Optimization
Good
SEO Word Counter for Titles, Meta Descriptions, and Page Copy
Decision Rule
If text fits the limit but could describe any page, rewrite it. If it repeats the keyword without adding a useful distinction, cut it.
Common Mistake
Why it fails: Writers chase benchmark ranges and forget the searcher's actual decision.
How to fix it: Start with intent, write the useful answer, then use counts to keep the snippet and page tidy.
Trust Signal
This aligns with modern quality evaluation: clear purpose, original usefulness, trustworthy detail, and no manufactured padding.