Word Counter

Paste or type your text — stats update instantly.

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0 Words
0 Characters
0 No Spaces
0 Sentences
0 Paragraphs
0 min Read Time
0 min Speak Time
0 Avg Sentence
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What is a Word Counter?

A word counter is a tool that analyses a piece of text and reports key statistics: total words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, and estimated reading or speaking time. Writers, students, bloggers, and SEO professionals use word counters to stay within assignment limits, meet content-length guidelines, or simply understand the shape of their writing.

This tool processes everything directly in your browser. Nothing you type is sent to any server — your text stays entirely on your device.


How to Use

  1. Type or paste your text into the box above.
  2. Statistics update automatically as you type — no button to press.
  3. Scroll down to the Keyword Density table to see your most-used words.
  4. Use Copy Text to copy your content, or Download .txt to save it.
  5. Click Clear to reset everything and start fresh.

Reading & Speaking Time Explained

Reading time is estimated at 238 words per minute — the widely-cited average silent reading speed for adults, based on research published in Reading Research Quarterly. Speaking time uses 130 words per minute, which reflects a measured, conversational pace suitable for presentations and speeches. Both figures are averages; your personal speed may vary by 20–30%.


Frequently Asked Questions

Most SEO research suggests that long-form content between 1,500 and 2,500 words tends to rank well for competitive keywords. Short posts (300–600 words) can rank for low-competition, informational queries. For comprehensive guides or pillar pages, 3,000–5,000+ words is common. That said, quality and relevance matter more than raw word count — a focused 800-word post can outperform a padded 2,000-word one.

A standard double-spaced page (as used in academic submissions) contains approximately 250–300 words. A single-spaced page holds around 500–600 words. However, this varies based on font size, margins, and line spacing. If you need to hit a specific page count, aim for 275 words per double-spaced page as a safe average.

No. This tool runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript. Your text is never sent to any server, never stored in a database, and never logged. When you close or refresh the tab, the text is gone. For privacy-sensitive content, this is the safest kind of online tool to use.

Keyword density is calculated as (word occurrences ÷ total words) × 100. For example, if "content" appears 10 times in a 500-word article, its density is 2%. Common stop words (the, and, is, a, etc.) are excluded from the table since they add no meaningful signal. A target keyword density of 1–2% is generally considered healthy for SEO without risking keyword stuffing penalties.

Common word count targets include: a Tweet/X post (280 characters), a LinkedIn post (3,000 characters), a short story (1,000–7,500 words), a novella (20,000–50,000 words), and a novel (70,000–100,000 words). Academic essays typically range from 500 words (short response) to 10,000+ words (dissertation chapters). Always check your specific guidelines first.

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