Tools/keyword density
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Keyword Density Checker Tool

Check keyword usage, frequency, and distribution in your content without over-optimizing.

Secure analysis over HTTPS

Understanding Your Keyword Density Results

Keyword density results show how often important terms appear in your content and whether usage feels balanced or over-optimized.

VISIBLE

Main Term Coverage

Shows whether the target keyword appears enough to support topic relevance.

OVERUSE

Keyword Stuffing Risk

Too much repetition can make copy feel unnatural and may weaken content quality.

MISSING INTENT

Topic Gaps

Low coverage or missing related terms may mean the page does not fully answer the search intent.

About This Tool

The Keyword Density Checker helps review how often words and phrases appear in a piece of content. It is useful for spotting underused topics, repeated phrases, and unnatural keyword stuffing.

Use it as a content QA tool for SEO articles, landing pages, product pages, category pages, and briefs.

Why It Matters

1

Avoid keyword stuffing

Find repeated terms that make copy feel forced or spammy.

2

Check topical coverage

See whether important terms appear naturally in the content.

3

Improve editorial QA

Give writers quick feedback on word and phrase distribution.

4

Support on-page optimization

Balance primary keywords, related terms, and human readability.

How To Improve

1

Paste the content

Use the final page copy, not only the main paragraph.

2

Review top terms

Look for unnatural repetition or missing important phrases.

3

Rewrite for meaning

Add related concepts naturally instead of repeating the same exact keyword.

4

Read the page aloud

If the copy sounds forced, reduce repetition even if the density looks fine.

Frequently Asked Questions

It is the percentage or frequency of a keyword compared with the total text.
There is no universal ideal. Focus on helpful, natural content that satisfies search intent.
Yes. Forced repetition can reduce quality and create a poor user experience.
Check both, but phrase-level analysis is often more useful for SEO copy.