Ever lost track of your word count mid-article? Or submitted a piece only to realize it was too short — or bloated with filler? That frustration is real, and it costs you time, quality, and sometimes rankings.
This real time word counter is built for writers who want more than just a number. Whether you are a blogger crafting SEO content, a student writing an essay, a copywriter working on ad scripts, or a journalist meeting tight deadlines — this tool gives you live feedback as you type.
You get instant word and character counts, reading time estimates, a readability score, keyword density analysis, and even a text-to-speech feature. Everything happens in your browser, in real time, with zero delay. No account needed. No data stored.
It is the kind of writing assistant that quietly does its job so you can focus on doing yours.
Key Features
What This Tool Does for You
- Live Word & Character Count — Updates instantly as you type or paste. No need to click anything.
- Reading Time Estimate — Calculated at an average of 200 words per minute, so you always know how long your content takes to read.
- Flesch Reading Ease Score — See exactly how readable your text is, from “Very Easy” to “Very Hard.” Crucial for SEO and audience retention.
- Character Breakdown — Separate counts for letters, numbers, spaces, and symbols. Useful for social media limits and data-heavy content.
- Top Keyword Density — Finds your top 5 most-used words and shows frequency and percentage. Perfect for on-page SEO checks.
- Paste from Clipboard — One-click paste so you never have to leave your workflow.
- Undo Clear — Made a mistake clearing your text? Restore it instantly.
- Export as .TXT — Save your content directly to your device in one click.
- Text-to-Speech — Hear your writing read aloud to catch awkward phrasing your eyes might miss.
How to Use
Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1 — Open the Tool Visit the page. The editor is ready immediately — no loading, no login, no setup.
Step 2 — Type or Paste Your Text Start typing directly in the text box, or click the Paste button to bring in content from your clipboard.
Step 3 — Watch the Stats Update Live As you write, the right panel updates in real time. You will see:
- Word and character count
- Estimated reading time
- Character breakdown (letters, numbers, spaces, symbols)
- Flesch Reading Ease score and difficulty level
Step 4 — Check Your Keyword Density Scroll down to the Top Keywords section. It shows your most-used words, how often they appear, and their percentage of total word count. Ideal for spotting keyword stuffing or underuse.
Step 5 — Use the Readability Score Look at your Flesch score. A score above 60 means your content is easy to read. If your score drops below 40, consider simplifying your sentences or vocabulary.
Step 6 — Listen to Your Text (Optional) Click Speak to hear your content read aloud. It is a surprisingly effective way to find sentence rhythm issues and repetitive phrasing.
Step 7 — Export or Clear When done, click Export .txt to save your content. Use Clear to reset, and Undo Clear if you change your mind.
Best Use Cases
Who Gets the Most from This Tool?
- SEO Content Writers — Monitor keyword density and readability without switching tools mid-draft.
- Bloggers & Copywriters — Stay on target for word count goals for articles, landing pages, and product descriptions.
- Students & Academic Writers — Meet essay word limits with precision. Check readability to match your submission requirements.
- Social Media Managers — Use the character count to stay within platform limits before copying to Twitter, LinkedIn, or Instagram captions.
- Email Marketers — Shorter emails perform better. Use this to tighten subject lines and body copy.
- Journalists & Editors — Estimate reading time, catch dense passages, and check text flow with the speak feature.
- Non-Native English Writers — The Flesch score helps you confirm your writing is clear and accessible before publishing.
Why Choose This Tool
Built with the Writer’s Experience in Mind
There are dozens of word counters online. Most count words and stop there. This one goes further — and it does so without demanding your email address or asking you to upgrade to a premium plan.
Everything runs inside your browser. Your text never leaves your device. That matters if you are working on confidential content, client copy, or unpublished drafts.
The Flesch Reading Ease calculator follows the same formula used by educators, publishers, and SEO professionals worldwide. It is not a proprietary score or a made-up metric — it is a trusted, research-backed standard built directly into this tool.
The keyword density feature is basic by design. It does not replace a full SEO audit tool, but it is genuinely useful for a quick gut-check during writing. You can spot if you have accidentally overused a term or buried a target phrase entirely.
This tool is also fast. It does not lag on long documents. Paste a 5,000-word article and the stats update smoothly.
Pros and Cons
Honest Assessment
Pros
- Completely free with no feature limits
- Works instantly with no account or setup
- Real-time updates with no delay
- Flesch readability score is accurate and useful
- Privacy-safe — all processing happens in the browser
- Export and text-to-speech features add real utility
- Clean, distraction-free interface
Cons
- Keyword density shows only the top 5 words
- No sentence count or paragraph count displayed
- Flesch score may differ slightly from tools using more sophisticated syllable counters
- No integration with Google Docs, WordPress, or other editors
- No dark mode currently available
Conclusion
Good writing starts with awareness. When you know your word count, your readability level, and how your keywords are distributed, you write with intention rather than guesswork.
This real time word counter is not trying to replace your editor or your instincts. It is here to give you honest, instant feedback while you work — so you spend less time second-guessing and more time creating.
Give it a try right now. Paste your latest draft, check the readability score, and see what your keyword distribution actually looks like. You might be surprised.
Your writing deserves better than a basic word count. Start here.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. There are no hidden charges, no premium tiers, and no account required. Every feature — including the readability score, keyword density, export, and text-to-speech — is available at no cost.
The Flesch Reading Ease formula used here follows the standard calculation: 206.835 – 1.015 × (words/sentences) – 84.6 × (syllables/words). The syllable counter uses a phoneme-pattern approximation, which is accurate for most English text. For highly technical or scientific writing, results may vary slightly from specialized readability analyzers.
No. All processing happens entirely within your browser using JavaScript. Nothing is sent to a server. Your content stays completely private on your own device.
Absolutely. The keyword density feature helps you monitor term frequency while writing, and the Flesch score tells you whether your content is easy enough for your target audience to read. Both factors influence content quality and on-page SEO performance.
For general blog content, a Flesch score between 60 and 70 is considered ideal. It signals that your writing is accessible to a wide audience without being overly simplistic. Academic or technical content can score lower, while content for children or casual readers should aim above 80.
The tool calculates reading time based on an average adult reading speed of 200 words per minute. This is a widely accepted benchmark for online content. Your actual reading time may vary depending on your audience and content complexity.
The word and character counters work with any language that uses standard spacing between words. However, the Flesch Reading Ease score and syllable counter are designed specifically for English text and may not produce meaningful results for other languages.
Keyword density refers to how often a specific word appears relative to the total word count. In SEO, it helps you avoid keyword stuffing (using a term too many times) or keyword neglect (not using it enough). Most SEO professionals aim for a natural density of 1–2% for primary keywords.