Word Counter

Count words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, and get reading & speaking time estimates instantly

A word counter is an essential tool for writers, students, bloggers, and professionals who need to track the length of their content. Whether you are writing an essay with a strict word limit, crafting a blog post, or preparing a speech, knowing your exact word and character count helps you stay on target and communicate effectively.

Type or paste your text
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Words
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Characters
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Characters (no spaces)
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Sentences
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Paragraphs
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Pages (250 w/p)
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Reading Time
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Speaking Time

Text Statistics

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Avg. Word Length
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Avg. Sentence Length
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Longest Word
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Shortest Word

Find & Replace

Top Keywords

Start typing to see keyword frequency and density.

How to Use the Word Counter

Whether you are a student working on an assignment, a blogger optimizing content, or a professional preparing a speech, our free word counter gives you instant, accurate statistics about your text. No signup, no downloads, and no limits on how much text you can analyze.

Step 1: Enter Your Text

Type directly into the text area or paste content from any source. The tool accepts text from word processors, web pages, PDFs, and any other source. There is no character limit, so you can paste entire articles, essays, or book chapters. All stats update in real time as you type or edit.

Step 2: Review Your Stats

The word counter instantly shows eight key metrics: word count, character count (with and without spaces), sentence count, paragraph count, estimated page count (at 250 words per page), reading time (at 238 WPM), and speaking time (at 150 WPM). Additional statistics include average word length, average sentence length, and longest/shortest words.

Step 3: Analyze Keywords

Scroll down to see the top keywords in your text, ranked by frequency. Common stop words like "the," "and," and "is" are excluded so you can focus on meaningful content words. Each keyword shows its count and density percentage, helping you optimize for SEO without keyword stuffing. Aim for a density between 1% and 3% for your target keywords.

Step 4: Find & Replace

Use the built-in Find & Replace feature to quickly edit your text. Toggle case sensitivity on or off, replace individual occurrences one at a time, or replace all matches at once. The match counter shows how many instances of your search term exist in the text, making bulk edits fast and easy.

Common Use Cases

Students use the word counter to meet essay and assignment word limits. Bloggers and content writers track article length for SEO optimization, where most experts recommend 1,500 to 2,500 words for in-depth posts. Social media managers check character counts for platforms like Twitter (280 characters) and LinkedIn (3,000 characters). Public speakers and podcasters use the speaking time estimate to plan presentations that fit their allotted time slots.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this word counter free to use?

Yes, the Word Counter is completely free with no limits on usage. You can count words, characters, sentences, and paragraphs as many times as you need. There is no signup required, no account to create, and no premium tier. Everything runs locally in your browser.

Is my text data safe and private?

Yes, everything runs entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. Your text is never sent to any server, never stored in a database, and never shared with anyone. Once you close the page, your text is gone. There is absolutely no server-side processing or tracking of your content.

How are words counted?

Words are counted by splitting your text on whitespace boundaries (spaces, tabs, and line breaks). Consecutive whitespace is treated as a single separator. Hyphenated words like 'well-known' count as one word. Empty lines and extra spaces do not inflate the count. This matches the word counting method used by Microsoft Word and Google Docs.

What is the difference between characters with and without spaces?

Characters with spaces counts every single character in your text including spaces, tabs, and line breaks. Characters without spaces excludes all whitespace, counting only letters, numbers, punctuation, and symbols. Social media platforms like Twitter use characters with spaces for their limits, while some academic requirements may specify characters without spaces.

How is reading time calculated?

Reading time is calculated by dividing the total word count by 238 words per minute, which is the widely accepted average silent reading speed for adults reading non-fiction English text. For example, a 1,000-word article takes about 4 minutes and 12 seconds to read. The estimate adjusts in real time as you type or paste text.

How is speaking time calculated?

Speaking time is estimated by dividing the word count by 150 words per minute, which is the average conversational speaking pace. Professional speakers and presenters typically speak at 130 to 170 WPM. This estimate is useful for planning speeches, presentations, podcast scripts, and video narrations.

What are stop words and why are they excluded from keyword analysis?

Stop words are extremely common words like 'the', 'is', 'and', 'a', and 'in' that appear frequently in all texts but carry little topical meaning. The keyword analysis excludes them to highlight the most meaningful and distinctive words in your content. This helps writers quickly see if their key topics are properly emphasized.

How is keyword density calculated?

Keyword density is the percentage of times a specific word appears relative to the total word count. It is calculated as (keyword frequency divided by total words) times 100. For example, if a word appears 5 times in a 500-word text, its density is 1.0%. SEO best practices recommend keeping individual keyword density between 1% and 3% to avoid keyword stuffing.