Keyword Density & Readability Analyzer
Optimizing on-page content for both search engines and real readers demands more than just sprinkling keywords—it requires a clear picture of how often your target term appears and how readable your copy really is. Manually counting words, calculating density, and plugging text into external readability calculators is tedious and breaks your writing flow. This client-side tool changes that: paste your article, blog post, or any text into the textarea, enter the keyword you want to track, and click “Analyze.” Instantly, you’ll get total word count, keyword occurrences, density percentage, Flesch Reading Ease score, and Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level—all calculated in your browser. No sign-ups, no network requests—your text never leaves your device.
Use this analyzer to fine-tune your SEO strategy, keep your writing accessible to a broad audience, and ensure you’re not over-optimizing. Whether you’re crafting Islamic inspiration posts, cricket analyses, or tech tutorials, you’ll know exactly where you stand. Compare multiple drafts, adjust phrasing, and watch your readability score climb. Ready to elevate your content? Scroll down to start analyzing.
Analysis Results
Words: –
Keyword Occurrences: –
Density: –%
Flesch Reading Ease: –
Grade Level: –
How It Works
- Enter the keyword you want to track in the “Target Keyword” field.
- Paste your text into the textarea below.
- Click “Analyze” to compute word count, density, and readability scores.
- Review the Flesch Reading Ease and Grade Level to gauge accessibility.
- Adjust your content until you hit your SEO and readability targets.
FAQ
- What is keyword density? It’s the percentage of times your keyword appears relative to total words.
- What’s Flesch Reading Ease? A readability metric: higher scores mean easier text (aim for 60–70).
- Is my data stored? No. All analysis runs client-side; nothing is sent to a server.
- Max text length? You can analyze up to 100,000 characters—just paste and run.
- Can I analyze multiple keywords? Run one keyword at a time, then repeat for others.
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