Keyword Density Checker
About the Keyword Density Checker
Our Keyword Density Checker analyzes the frequency of specific keywords within your web page content. While keyword density is no longer a primary ranking factor for search engines like Google (who focus more on natural language and topical authority), understanding it can still be useful to ensure your target keywords are present in appropriate measure without resorting to "keyword stuffing," which can harm your SEO. This tool helps you maintain a balanced and relevant content strategy.
How to Use Our Keyword Density Checker
- Enter URL or Paste Content: In the input textarea, you can either:
- Type or paste the full URL of a web page you want to analyze (e.g., `https://www.example.com/your-article`).
- Or, directly paste the text content of your article.
- Click "Check Keyword Density": Press the button to analyze the content.
- View Results: The tool will display a list of keywords and their respective densities (percentage of total words).
- Analyze & Refine: Use the report to check for optimal keyword distribution, avoiding both under-optimization and over-optimization.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q: What is keyword density?
A: Keyword density is the percentage of times a particular keyword or phrase appears on a web page relative to the total number of words on that page. Formula: (Number of Keywords / Total Words) * 100.
Q: Is there an ideal keyword density for SEO?
A: No, there is no universally ideal keyword density. Google's algorithms are sophisticated and prioritize natural language. Over-optimizing with high keyword density ("keyword stuffing") can lead to penalties.
Q: How does this tool extract content from a URL?
A: When a URL is provided, the tool will attempt to fetch the web page's HTML and then extract the visible text content. This requires web fetching capabilities on the backend.
Q: What keywords does it analyze?
A: The tool analyzes all unique words and multi-word phrases (up to a certain length) present in the content, then sorts them by frequency and calculates density.