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More writing and text tools

When you already know your word count but still need to hit a character limit, fix casing, or sanity-check keywords and reading time, these utilities sit on the same workflow as the main word counter. Everything runs with a fast, touch-friendly layout on phones and tablets. Whether you are optimizing a headline for social media character limits, checking keyword balance before publishing, or estimating how long a draft takes to read aloud, each tool gives you a focused answer without loading a suite you do not need.

Tool list

Beyond free tools

When you already count every word

The discipline that brings you here—length, clarity, search intent—often turns into a workflow problem. These Claude Code skills are for writers and builders who want repeatable systems: SEO, AI citations, structured data, and content pipelines you own. No hype—just tools that match the seriousness you already bring to the page.

Why this page exists

  • One job per tool: fewer tabs and less context switching than bloated suites.
  • Editorial speed: measure length, density, and readability without leaving the browser you already write in.
  • GEO and AEO-friendly habits: pair answer-first structure with metrics instead of chasing raw keyword repetition.

Fast feedback

Paste, adjust, and re-run counts in seconds—useful when you are trimming for newsletters or captions.

Privacy-minded workflow

Prefer local processing for everyday drafts; see also our note on browser-side processing.

Mobile layout

Large tap targets and readable type scales so you can edit on a phone without pinching constantly.

Frequently asked questions

What is the More Tools page on TextWordCount?
It is a single hub that links to extra browser-based utilities—character counts, case changes, reading time, keyword density, and more—beyond the main word counter on the homepage.
Do these tools upload my text to a server?
TextWordCount is built for local, in-browser processing where possible. You should still avoid pasting highly sensitive secrets into any web tool; for confidential drafts, use offline editors and review each tool’s privacy notes.
Which tool should I use first?
Start with the main word counter for length targets, then use the text analyzer or reading time when you need structure and pacing checks. Use keyword density when you are tuning a page for search intent.
Are these tools free?
Yes—the utilities listed here are free to use in the browser with no account required for standard analysis workflows.
How does this help SEO and answer engines (AEO/GEO)?
Clear length, readability, and keyword balance help humans and systems trust your page. Use counts and density as guardrails, not stuffing—pair metrics with solid headings and direct answers.
Can I use these tools on mobile devices?
Yes. All tools on TextWordCount are designed with a mobile-first layout. They work in any modern browser on phones and tablets without needing to install an app or create an account.

Partner resource

Digital Muse Vault

Templates, automation ideas, and creative assets for builders who outgrow a single page of utilities. Separate from the free tools above—use it when you want deeper playbooks and downloadable resources.

Explore Digital Muse Vault