Headline Analyzer
Free headline analyzer. Score your blog title for length, power and emotional words, and structure, with actionable tips to make it more clickable — in your browser.
Type a headline above, then press Analyze headline.
Actionable tips
🔒 Analysis runs entirely in your browser — your headline is never uploaded.
Free Headline Analyzer
This free headline analyzer scores any blog title or headline out of 100 and shows you exactly why. Paste a headline and instantly see its word count, character count (with the ideal 50–60 indicator for search results), whether it contains a number, and how many power, emotional, common and uncommon words it uses. It’s completely free, needs no sign-up, and runs entirely in your browser.
How to use the headline analyzer
- Type or paste your headline into the box (or click Load sample).
- Press Analyze headline to score it out of 100.
- Read the colored score gauge and the stat cards for words, characters, numbers and power words.
- Check the word-type breakdown to see which words are doing the heavy lifting.
- Follow the actionable tips, then edit your headline and analyze again.
What makes a great headline
A great headline does several jobs at once. Length matters: aim for roughly 6–12 words and 50–60 characters so Google shows the full title in search results instead of cutting it off with an ellipsis. Power words — like “proven”, “ultimate”, “essential” and “secret” — make a promise and add authority, while emotional words such as “amazing”, “surprising” or “effortless” create curiosity and feeling.
Numbers are one of the simplest wins: headlines that begin with a number (“7 ways”, “10 tips”) set a clear expectation and consistently earn more clicks. Finally, clarity wins over cleverness — too many small filler words (the, of, to, for) dilute the message, so balance them with vivid, specific terms that tell the reader exactly what they will get. This analyzer measures all of these factors and combines them into a single, transparent score so you can improve a headline in seconds.