Clarity
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Browser-side checker
The SEO Title Checker helps you review a page title before it becomes the promise shown in search results, browser tabs, and shared links. It checks length, clarity, repetition, and whether the important topic appears early enough to be understood quickly. The goal is not to chase a magic number or guarantee ranking. It is to make the title specific, readable, and aligned with the actual page. Paste a title, compare the Publish Readiness Report, then rewrite anything that sounds padded, duplicated, or vague. This is especially useful when several pages target similar topics and each title needs a clear reason to exist.
Live analyzer
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Unique tool
Choose a channel and TextPulses checks length, clarity, readability, keyword balance, and publication readiness using transparent browser-side rules.
Score
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Browser-side report
Paste your text to generate your report. Your analysis will appear here.
No backend, no external AI, and no draft upload. The report is generated locally in your browser.
Writing Health
Scores use simple, transparent rules. They are helpful signals, not editorial verdicts.
Keyword density
Stop words are ignored for one-word density so repeated meaningful terms stand out faster.
Add more text to see phrase frequency.
Add more text to see phrase frequency.
Add more text to see phrase frequency.
Educational information
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.
The title tag is often the first search-result promise a user sees. A clear title can help the right searcher understand the page before they click.
Length is only one signal. The checker also helps you catch vague wording, repeated keywords, and titles that do not match the page type.
A practical range is often around 40 to 60 characters, but clarity and page match matter more than a fixed number.
No. Search display can vary by query, device, and pixel width. The checker gives practical risk signals, not a display guarantee.
Use the brand when it helps recognition or trust. Avoid adding it mechanically when it makes many titles look duplicated.
Use the primary topic once, then add audience, format, location, or benefit only when it clarifies the page.
Estimates are practical signals, not guarantees.