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TextPulses

Browser-side checker

Keyword Density Checker

The Keyword Density Checker helps editors catch repetition before it turns into keyword stuffing or dull writing. It lists common one-word, two-word, and three-word phrases, then connects that repetition to practical publish readiness signals. Use it when a page targets a topic but you are not sure whether the language still feels natural. The best fix is not always to replace a keyword with a synonym. Sometimes the draft needs a better example, clearer section, or more specific detail. The checker keeps the analysis local and gives you a review path without pretending density alone decides search performance.

Live analyzer

Count, clean, and check fit before you publish

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Unique tool

PublishFit Score

Choose a channel and TextPulses checks length, clarity, readability, keyword balance, and publication readiness using transparent browser-side rules.

Score

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Current length
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Recommended limit
600+ words for useful depth; keep sections scannable.

Clarity

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Keyword density

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Readability

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Publication readiness

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Actionable recommendations

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Browser-side report

Publish Readiness Report

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No backend, no external AI, and no draft upload. The report is generated locally in your browser.

Writing Health

Rule-based quality signals

Scores use simple, transparent rules. They are helpful signals, not editorial verdicts.

Clarity Score

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Variety Score

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Keyword Balance

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Sentence Flow

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Readability

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PublishFit

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Keyword density

Top words and phrase frequency

Stop words are ignored for one-word density so repeated meaningful terms stand out faster.

One-word phrases

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Two-word phrases

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Three-word phrases

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Educational information

How to use this result responsibly

Treat this checker as an editorial review aid. The metrics can highlight length, clarity, repetition, scanability, and format fit, but they do not guarantee search ranking, social engagement, approval, or professional accuracy.

What this tool checks

  • Whether a target phrase appears too often.
  • Whether repeated language is replacing useful detail.
  • Whether the page needs topic breadth rather than more keywords.

How to use this tool

  1. Paste the full draft so repeated phrases have real context.
  2. Review one-word, two-word, and three-word phrase lists together.
  3. Keep necessary topic language, but remove repetition that does not add meaning.
  4. Add examples, subtopics, or clarifying details instead of repeating the same phrase.

Practical examples

A service page draft.
A blog introduction.
A YouTube description.
A category page.

Common mistakes

  • Repeating the exact phrase in every heading.
  • Removing all keywords until the topic becomes unclear.
  • Using density as a ranking promise.
  • Ignoring reader usefulness.

Final checklist

  • Review top repeated phrases.
  • Replace forced repetition with specifics.
  • Keep natural topic terms.
  • Add examples where repetition hides thin sections.
  • Check final readability.

FAQ

What keyword density is too high?

There is no universal safe percentage. Treat unusually repeated terms as a warning to review naturalness and usefulness.

Should I remove every repeated keyword?

No. Some repetition is normal when a page has a clear topic. Remove forced repetition, not useful topic language.

Can density guarantee SEO results?

No. Density alone does not determine rankings and should not replace helpful content, intent match, or technical quality.

What is better than adding more keywords?

Add specific examples, comparisons, definitions, caveats, or steps that help the reader understand the topic.

Related examples

Estimates are practical signals, not guarantees.