Keyword Density Checker – Analyze Keyword Usage in Your Content

What is the Keyword Density Checker?

The Keyword Density Checker analyzes your content to measure how often specific keywords appear relative to total word count. This helps you optimize content for SEO without over-stuffing keywords, which can harm rankings. Get real-time reports on keyword frequency and density percentage.

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How to Use

  1. Paste your content into the text area
  2. Enter keywords to analyze (comma-separated)
  3. View real-time keyword density statistics
  4. Download a detailed report (optional)

Total Words: 0

Example: seo, content marketing, digital strategy

FAQs

Q: What is keyword density?
A: Keyword density is the percentage of times a keyword appears in your content compared to the total number of words. It's calculated as: (Keyword Count / Total Words) × 100.
Q: What is the ideal keyword density for SEO?
A: The ideal keyword density is 1-3%. This indicates natural keyword usage without keyword stuffing. Densities above 3% may trigger search engine penalties.
Q: Does higher keyword density improve rankings?
A: No. Modern search engines prioritize content quality and natural language. High keyword density often results in penalties. Focus on relevant, well-written content instead.
Q: Should I analyze LSI keywords too?
A: Yes. LSI (Latent Semantic Indexing) keywords are related terms that search engines use to understand content context. Consider using variations of your main keyword naturally.
Q: Can I check multiple keywords at once?
A: Yes, enter keywords separated by commas and the tool will analyze the density for each one.
Q: How do I improve keyword density if it's too low?
A: Add your keyword naturally in headings, subheadings, and throughout the content. Use synonyms and related terms for variety while keeping the content readable.
Q: Is case-sensitivity important?
A: No, this tool treats keywords as case-insensitive, so "SEO," "seo," and "Seo" are counted as the same keyword.
Q: Can I analyze partial matches?
A: Yes, this tool counts both exact matches and partial matches. For example, "content" will match both "content" and "content marketing."