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Use case · Text Analysis

Text Analyzer For Bloggers

Optimize your blog posts with word count, readability, and SEO analysis tools

You're here for for bloggers: open text analyzer in your browser, paste your draft, and use the live stats to check length and structure before you publish. No account.

blogger toolsblog writingcontent optimizationblog SEO
Cost
Free
Signup
Not required
Runs
In your browser
Setup
Instant
Developer workflow and AI-assisted tooling

Open Text Analyzer for this workflow

Posts between 1,500 and 2,500 words get 3× more organic traffic than shorter articles (Backlinko, 2023). Knowing where you stand before you publish is the difference between guessing and deciding. Text Analyzer gives you that number instantly, in your browser, analysis that runs in your browser on any device.

Open Text Analyzer

What you get

  • Meet word count requirements for different platforms
  • Optimize content for SEO and readability
  • Improve engagement with reading time estimates
  • Ensure grammar and spelling accuracy
Text Analyzer For Bloggers — tool interface screenshot

Examples

1

Word count for Medium articles (1,500-2,000 words)

2

Character limits for social media previews

3

Keyword density for SEO optimization

4

Reading time for better user experience

Who it's for

bloggerscontent creatorsfreelance writersmarketing professionals
Text Analyzer results and features for For Bloggers — screenshot

By the numbers

Numbers worth checking before you ship for bloggers

Citation-grade reference points the for bloggers workflow runs into.

  • 1,500–2,500 words

    Common range for SEO long-form blog posts

    Source: Industry analyses (HubSpot, Backlinko)

  • 238 wpm

    Average silent reading rate (English)

    Source: Brysbaert (2019)

Length targets that move the SEO needle

These are the ranges most analyses agree on. Treat them as ranges, not rules — intent and format matter more than hitting an exact count.

SEO field length recommendations.
FieldRecommended lengthWhy
Title tag50–60 charactersAvoids truncation in Google SERP
Meta description155–160 charactersSnippet display before truncation
H1 heading20–70 charactersReadable headline, not a sentence
URL slug3–5 words / 60 charsCrawl-friendly and shareable
Long-form blog post1,500–2,500 wordsTopical depth without padding
Pillar / hub page3,000–5,000 wordsComprehensive coverage of a topic

What Text Analyzer includes

Highlight

Comprehensive text statistics

Readability analysis

Word frequency analysis

Writing style insights

Text Analyzer workflow example for For Bloggers — screenshot

Ready to try it?

Paste your draft, see the exact word count, and know whether it hits the 1,500-word threshold most blog algorithms reward — before you publish. No signup, no wait.

Try Text Analyzer Free

Frequently asked questions

Is Text Analyzer free for for bloggers?

Yes — Text Analyzer is free for for bloggers, with no signup, paywall, or daily quota. The whole tool runs in your browser, so usage is unlimited and unrestricted regardless of how many drafts you check.

Does Text Analyzer fit a bloggers's workflow?

Yes. Text Analyzer is designed for bloggerss who need meet word count requirements for different platforms. Open it in a tab next to your editor, paste each revision when you want to verify, and let the live counts decide whether to ship or trim.

What does Text Analyzer measure during for bloggers?

Text Analyzer returns readability scores, sentence and paragraph distribution, and reading time. For for bloggers, those numbers tell you whether the draft matches the audience's attention span.

Can I trust the counts Text Analyzer shows for for bloggers?

Yes. Text Analyzer uses the browser's Unicode-aware text segmentation, so counts match the underlying characters and words instead of guessing from raw byte length. The numbers you see are the same numbers any platform would compute on the same text.

Is my text private when I use Text Analyzer for for bloggers?

Yes. Text Analyzer runs entirely on your device — text is processed in the browser and never sent to a server. Once you close the tab, nothing about the draft is retained on TextWordCount.

Can Text Analyzer be used on a phone for for bloggers?

Yes. Text Analyzer works the same on iPhone, Android, tablets, and desktops. Layout adapts to the screen, and every feature — including comprehensive text statistics — is fully usable on touch input.

What's the typical for bloggers workflow with Text Analyzer?

Open text analyzer in a new tab, paste your latest draft, and read the live stats. Adjust the draft until the numbers fit your target — for example word count for medium articles (1,500-2,000 words) — then copy back into the destination editor. The whole loop usually takes under a minute per revision.

Glossary

Concepts you'll see while using this tool

Short, source-backed definitions of the terms behind Text Analyzer.

Word countSource ↗
The total number of word tokens in a piece of text, typically derived by splitting on whitespace and punctuation. Common in publishing, education, and SEO as a length metric.
Character countSource ↗
The total number of code points (or graphemes, in Unicode-aware tools) in a text. Platforms like SMS and Twitter enforce limits in characters, not words.
UnicodeSource ↗
The international standard that assigns a unique number to every character in every script. Modern text tools use Unicode so counts work consistently across languages and emoji.
ReadabilitySource ↗
How easy a text is to read, measured by formulas that combine sentence length, word length, and syllable counts. Higher readability typically means shorter sentences and simpler words.
Flesch–Kincaid grade levelSource ↗
A readability formula that maps text difficulty to a US school grade level using sentence length and syllables per word. A score of 8 means a typical 13-14 year-old should understand it.
Intl.SegmenterSource ↗
A JavaScript API that splits text into Unicode graphemes, words, and sentences using the same locale rules browsers use natively. Tools that use it count complex scripts correctly.

How we count, and when this page was checked

Word and character counts on this page use the browser's Unicode-aware Intl.Segmenter API, so figures match the underlying graphemes rather than guessing from byte length. Reading-time estimates default to 238 wpm (Brysbaert, 2019). Last editorial review: 2026-05-23.

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