SEO Word Counter word-counter.dev
SEO content fields

Check title tags, descriptions and page copy

Field counts

Title tag 59 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 35-60 characters.
Meta description 134 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 120-155 characters.
URL slug 16 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 8-55 characters.
H1 16 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 10-70 characters.
Intro copy 38 words
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 35-90 words.
Open Graph title 59 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 35-70 characters.
Open Graph description 134 characters
Comfortable Inside the common working range of 100-200 characters.
Repeated words
  1. page 8
  2. seo 7
  3. word 7
  4. copy 6
  5. descriptions 5
  6. check 4
  7. counter 4
  8. counts 4
  9. live 4
  10. titles 4
How to use this checker

Start with the fields a searcher sees first: title tag, URL slug and meta description. Then check the visible page fields, especially the H1, intro and body copy. A page can have clean metadata and still fail if the visible content does not answer the query.

The ranges here are practical editing ranges, not ranking rules. Use them to catch copy that is missing, thin, hard to scan or likely to be clipped in common previews.

SEO word count questions this page is built for

What is the best word count for SEO content?

There is no fixed best word count. A page should be long enough to satisfy the search intent, answer the important follow-up questions and support the tool, product or explanation on the page. Extra words do not help if they make the page slower to use.

How long should a title tag be?

Use the title count as a writing guardrail. Search engines can create title links from the title tag, H1, prominent page text, links and other signals. A concise, descriptive title is safer than a repeated list of keywords.

How long should a meta description be?

Write a short summary that helps someone decide whether the page matches their query. Search snippets are generated from page content and may use the meta description when it is the clearest summary available.

Should other page types get their own counters?

Only if the workflow changes. SEO metadata deserves its own page because the fields, preview and checks are different from a general word counter. The same rule applies to target counts, markup cleanup, token budgets, reading time, localization, comparison counts and strict character limits. Each page should earn its URL by adding inputs, previews or calculations the main textarea cannot provide cleanly.