Word Counter

Paste any text below. All metrics update instantly — no button to press, no login required.

Twitter: 0/280 Meta title: 0/60 Meta desc: 0/160 Instagram bio: 0/150 SMS: 0/160
Words
0
Characters
0
No Spaces
0
characters
Sentences
0
Paragraphs
0
Reading Time
0
minutes @ 200 wpm
Speaking Time
0
minutes @ 130 wpm
Unique Words
0
Avg Sentence
0
words / sentence
Pages
0
double-spaced
Freelancer Earnings
@ $ / word
$0.00
estimated earnings

Free Word Counter Tool — Count Words, Characters & Reading Time Instantly

Paste any text above. In under a second you will see your word count, character count, reading time, and several other writing metrics — all calculated live as you type. There is nothing to install, no account to create, and no usage limit. Whether you are finishing an essay at midnight, checking a blog post before publishing, or making sure your tweet fits within 280 characters, this tool gives you the exact numbers you need in the time it takes to blink.

Whether you are a student, blogger, SEO expert, freelance writer, or social media manager, this tool helps you work faster and more accurately. You can also try our Character Counter, Case Converter, and Keyword Density Checker for complete text analysis.


What Does This Word Counter Actually Measure?

Most word counters show you one or two numbers and leave you guessing about everything else. This tool gives you the full picture every time you paste text into it. Here is exactly what you get:

  • Word count — the total number of words in your text, counted the same way Microsoft Word and Google Docs do it.
  • Character count (with spaces) — every letter, number, symbol, and space included. This is what platforms like Twitter and Instagram use when they enforce their limits.
  • Character count (without spaces) — useful when you need to know the actual density of your written content, not the whitespace around it.
  • Sentence count — how many complete sentences your text contains, based on standard punctuation endings.
  • Paragraph count — the number of distinct text blocks, giving you a quick sense of your content structure.
  • Reading time — calculated at 200 words per minute, the widely accepted average for adult silent reading of general online content.
  • Speaking time — calculated at 130 words per minute, the average natural conversational pace. Ideal for speechwriters, podcasters, and presenters.
  • Unique words — how many distinct words appear in your text. A low unique-word ratio signals repetition worth addressing.
  • Average sentence length — words per sentence on average. Shorter averages generally produce more readable, scannable content.
  • Estimated pages — based on standard double-spaced formatting at 250 words per page.
  • Freelancer earnings — enter your per-word rate and the tool calculates your pay for the pasted text instantly.

All of these update in real time. There is no submit button and no loading delay — you type or paste, and the numbers change.


Word Count Requirements by Content Type

One of the most common questions writers ask is not just "how many words do I have?" but "how many words should I have?" The answer depends entirely on what you are writing. The table below is based on widely accepted standards across publishing, academia, digital marketing, and social media.

Content TypeRecommended Word CountWhy It Matters
Blog post (standard)1,500 – 2,500 wordsLong enough to cover a topic thoroughly; short enough to hold attention
Long-form SEO article2,500 – 4,000 wordsTends to earn more backlinks and cover more semantic territory for Google
Short blog post600 – 900 wordsGood for news updates, quick guides, or opinion pieces
Email newsletter200 – 500 wordsReaders scan emails; brevity increases click-through rates
Marketing email75 – 150 wordsShort, punchy, one clear call to action
Instagram captionUp to 2,200 charactersOnly the first ~125 show before "more" — front-load your message
Tweet / X postUp to 280 charactersHard platform limit; shorter posts often get more engagement
Facebook postUnder 250 charactersPosts over this length see lower average reach in feeds
LinkedIn post150 – 300 wordsEnough to tell a story without losing a professional audience
YouTube script (1 min video)130 – 150 wordsBased on average speaking pace of 130 words per minute
YouTube script (10 min video)1,300 – 1,500 wordsA fully scripted 10-minute video needs roughly this many words
Podcast episode (30 min)3,900 – 4,500 wordsConversational pace is slightly slower than formal speech
University essay1,500 – 3,000 wordsTypical undergraduate requirement; always check your specific brief
Master's dissertation chapter8,000 – 12,000 wordsVaries by institution; use your supervisor's guidelines
Novel (debut fiction)70,000 – 100,000 wordsMost traditional publishers expect debut novels in this range
Short story1,000 – 7,500 wordsUnder 1,000 is flash fiction; over 7,500 approaches novella territory
Children's picture book500 – 1,000 wordsIllustrations carry most of the narrative; text stays minimal
Meta title (Google SEO)50 – 60 charactersGoogle truncates titles beyond ~60 characters in search results
Meta description (Google SEO)140 – 160 charactersStays visible in the SERP preview without getting cut off
Google Ads headlineUp to 30 charactersHard character limit for each headline field in responsive ads
Press release400 – 600 wordsOne page is ideal; journalists will not read a lengthy PR document
Product description100 – 300 wordsEnough to cover key benefits and answer buying questions
Landing page copy500 – 1,000 wordsDepends on offer complexity; always test shorter vs longer versions

These are starting points, not rigid rules. A 600-word post written with genuine expertise will always outperform a 3,000-word piece padded with filler. Word count is a signal, not a guarantee.


Platform Character Limits — Know Before You Post

Running out of space mid-sentence is one of the most avoidable frustrations in writing for social media or SEO. The live badges above your text input show your character count against the most common limits in real time. Here is the full reference table:

Platform / FieldCharacter LimitNotes
Twitter / X post280 charactersURLs count as 23 chars regardless of actual length
Twitter / X bio160 charactersShort and punchy works best here
Instagram caption2,200 charactersOnly ~125 show before the "more" tap on mobile
Instagram bio150 charactersEmojis count as 2 characters on some devices
Facebook post63,206 charactersEngagement drops sharply after ~250 characters in practice
LinkedIn post3,000 charactersLong-form posts with line breaks perform well
LinkedIn headline220 charactersShows up in search results — make every word count
LinkedIn summary2,600 charactersFirst 200 characters show before "see more"
Google meta title~60 charactersGoogle measures in pixels — ~60 chars is the safe average
Google meta description~155–160 charactersStay under 155 to be safe on mobile
Google Ads headline30 charactersHard limit per headline field
Google Ads description90 charactersHard limit per description line
YouTube title100 charactersOnly ~70 show on desktop search; front-load your keyword
YouTube description (above fold)~157 charactersWhat viewers see before clicking "Show More"
Pinterest pin description500 charactersFirst 50–60 show in the feed
TikTok caption2,200 charactersFirst 100 display before "more"; use those chars strategically
WhatsApp status139 charactersHard limit
SMS message (single)160 charactersGoes above this and it splits into multiple messages
Email subject line40–60 charactersMost clients truncate beyond ~50–60 on mobile

How Many Pages Is Your Word Count?

The answer depends on your font, font size, line spacing, and margin settings. The numbers below are based on standard academic and business formatting: 12pt Times New Roman or Arial, with 1-inch margins.

Word CountSingle-spaced pagesDouble-spaced pagesNotes
250 words~0.5 pages~1 pageShort scene, product description, or email
500 words~1 page~2 pagesSolid short blog post or news article
750 words~1.5 pages~3 pagesCommon minimum for college essays
1,000 words~2 pages~4 pagesStandard short essay length
1,500 words~3 pages~6 pagesA decent introductory blog article
2,000 words~4 pages~8 pagesSolid depth for an SEO article
2,500 words~5 pages~10 pagesResearch paper or long-form content
3,000 words~6 pages~12 pagesGetting into academic territory
5,000 words~10 pages~20 pagesShort academic paper or detailed guide
10,000 words~20 pages~40 pagesThesis chapter or small eBook
50,000 words~100 pages~200 pagesShort novel or substantial non-fiction
80,000 words~160 pages~320 pagesStandard fiction novel length

Publishers and academic institutions sometimes use different standards — always check the specific requirements before submitting.


How to Count Words in Different Programs

Not everyone is working in a browser. Here is how to find the word count in the tools people use most often.

In Microsoft Word

  1. Open your document in Word.
  2. Look at the bottom-left corner — Word displays a running word count there automatically.
  3. For more detail, click the word count at the bottom, or go to Review → Word Count in the top menu.
  4. The full panel shows words, characters (with and without spaces), paragraphs, and lines.
  5. To count a specific section, highlight that text first — the counter will show "X / Y words" where X is the selection count.

In Google Docs

  1. Go to Tools → Word Count in the top menu.
  2. A popup appears showing pages, words, characters, and characters without spaces.
  3. Tick "Display word count while typing" and the count stays visible at the bottom as you write.
  4. To count a specific section, select the text first, then open Tools → Word Count.

On iPhone or iPad (Pages App)

  1. Open your document in Pages.
  2. Tap the three-dot menu in the top-right corner.
  3. Tap Document Setup, then look for Word Count in the header/footer options.
  4. Alternatively tap the wrench icon, then tap Document, and enable Word Count.

On Android (Google Docs App)

  1. Open the document in the Google Docs app.
  2. Tap the three-dot menu in the top-right corner.
  3. Select Word Count from the dropdown.

Why Your Word Count Can Differ Between Tools

Different tools define "word" slightly differently. Hyphenated words like "well-written" may count as one or two. URLs and email addresses are another grey area. Our counter uses the same logic as Microsoft Word — any string of characters separated by a space or standard punctuation counts as one word.


Reading Speed, Speaking Time & Why They Matter

Reading time is not just a vanity metric on a blog post. Research on online behaviour shows that users decide whether to keep reading within the first few seconds. Displaying accurate reading time sets honest expectations and reduces bounce from content that is longer than a reader anticipated.

Reading speed benchmarks:
Simple, conversational content: 250–300 wpm
Standard blog posts and news articles: 200–250 wpm
Technical or academic content: 100–150 wpm
Legal documents or dense research papers: 75–100 wpm
Speaking time at 130 wpm (natural pace):
500 words ≈ 3.8 minutes
1,000 words ≈ 7.7 minutes
1,500 words ≈ 11.5 minutes
3,000 words ≈ 23 minutes

For formal presentations, many speakers aim for 100–110 wpm to allow for pauses and emphasis. A 20-minute conference talk typically uses 2,000 to 2,200 words of scripted material.


Word Count for SEO — What the Research Actually Shows

There is a persistent myth that longer content always ranks better. The reality is more nuanced. Studies tracking the average word count of top-ranking pages consistently find that content in positions 1–3 tends to be longer — but the reason it ranks well is not that Google rewards word count as a direct metric. It ranks well because:

  • Longer content tends to cover a topic more completely, satisfying more of the searcher's intent.
  • Comprehensive content earns more backlinks because it becomes a reference resource.
  • More words mean more opportunities for related terms and questions to appear naturally.

What this means in practice: write until you have answered everything a reader genuinely needs to know, then stop. A 900-word article that fully answers a question will outperform a 3,500-word article that is 2,600 words of padding around 900 words of real information.

Practical benchmark: Look at the average word count of the top 5 results for your target keyword. Aim for similar depth — not necessarily similar length. Depth means covering sub-questions and related areas. Length is just the byproduct.

Freelance Writing & Word Count — Rates and Calculations

If you are a freelance writer, word count is directly tied to your income. Most content platforms and clients pay per word. Knowing exactly how many words are in a piece before you send an invoice prevents disputes and saves time.

Experience LevelTypical Rate (per word)Example: 2,000-word article
Entry level$0.03 – $0.06$60 – $120
Mid-range$0.08 – $0.15$160 – $300
Experienced specialist$0.20 – $0.50$400 – $1,000
High-end technical / medical$0.50 – $1.00+$1,000 – $2,000+

Use the freelancer earnings calculator in the stats panel above — paste your completed draft, enter your per-word rate, and the tool shows your earnings instantly.

Pro tip: Always paste your completed draft into a word counter before submitting. Word processors can silently add words in headers, footers, or table cells that you might not intend to count — depending on your agreement with the client.

Understanding Text Metrics — Quick Reference

MetricDefinitionWho Uses It Most
Word CountTotal words in textWriters, students, SEO professionals, editors
Characters (with spaces)Every character including spacesSocial media managers, SEO (meta tags)
Characters (without spaces)Excludes spaces — pure content densityTranslators, copywriters billing by character
SentencesComplete sentence countReadability analysis, academic writing
ParagraphsDistinct text blocksEditors checking structure and formatting
Reading TimeTime to read at 200 wpmBloggers, content marketers, UX writers
Speaking TimeTime to speak at 130 wpmPresenters, podcasters, teachers, speechwriters
Unique WordsNumber of distinct wordsWriters checking vocabulary variety
Avg Sentence LengthWords per sentence on averageReadability improvement, content editors
Pages (double-spaced)Estimated standard pages at 250 words/pageStudents, book authors, academic submitters

Key Features of Our Word Counter Tool

  • Instant word and character count — updates as you type, no submit button needed
  • Sentence and paragraph detection with real-time accuracy
  • Reading time estimation at 200 wpm (industry standard for online content)
  • Speaking time estimation at 130 wpm for presentations and scripts
  • Unique word count to identify repetition in your writing
  • Average sentence length for readability analysis
  • Pages estimate based on double-spaced, standard formatting
  • Live platform character limits for Twitter, meta tags, Instagram, and SMS
  • Freelancer earnings calculator — enter your rate and get paid the right amount
  • 100% free with no login, no signup, and no usage limits
  • Works on all devices — mobile, tablet, and desktop
  • Private and secure — nothing you type is stored or sent to any server

How to Use This Word Counter Tool

  1. Type or paste your text into the input box at the top of the page.
  2. All metrics update automatically — no button to press.
  3. Check the platform limit badges below the text box if you are writing for social media or SEO.
  4. Enter your per-word rate in the freelancer earnings card to calculate your pay.
  5. Edit your text and watch all counts change in real time.

Who Can Use This Tool?

  • Students and researchers — stay within essay and assignment word limits without manually counting
  • Bloggers and content creators — ensure articles hit the right length for your audience and SEO goals
  • SEO professionals — check content length against competitor benchmarks before publishing
  • Freelancers and copywriters — count words accurately before invoicing clients per word
  • Social media managers — stay within character limits for Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and more
  • Speechwriters and presenters — use speaking time to calibrate scripts for specific time slots
  • Journalists — stay within publication word limits for news stories and features
  • Authors and novelists — track progress toward chapter and full manuscript targets

Tips for Better Writing

  • Write clear and short sentences — aim for an average of 15 to 20 words per sentence for maximum readability
  • Use headings and subheadings to break up longer content into scannable sections
  • Avoid unnecessary filler words; if a sentence means the same thing without a word, cut it
  • Focus on user value — every paragraph should answer a question or solve a problem
  • Use keywords naturally — forced repetition hurts both readability and SEO
  • Check your unique word count — if it is significantly lower than your total word count, you may be repeating yourself
  • Watch your average sentence length — above 25 words per sentence, most readers begin to struggle

To improve your writing quality further, use our Grammar Checker. Need placeholder text for design and layout testing? Try our Random Text Generator.


Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, completely free. There is no paid tier, no credit system, and no limit on how much text you can analyse. You can use it as many times as you like without creating an account.
Very accurate. The counter uses the same word-splitting logic as Microsoft Word — any string of characters separated by a space or standard punctuation counts as a word. Results may occasionally differ slightly from Google Docs because it uses a slightly different algorithm for contractions, hyphenated words, and certain special characters.
A 5-minute speech is roughly 650 to 750 words, based on an average speaking pace of 130 words per minute. If you tend to speak faster, aim for 700 to 800 words. If you speak more slowly or include pauses, stay closer to 550 to 650. Always practise with a timer — the only reliable way to calibrate your own pace.
There is no single ideal length. For most competitive informational keywords, articles between 1,500 and 2,500 words tend to rank well. The real target is comprehensiveness — cover every angle a reader genuinely needs, and stop when the topic is fully addressed. Adding words purely to hit a number hurts readability and does not help rankings.
With 12pt Times New Roman or Arial, 1-inch margins, and double spacing, a standard page holds approximately 250 words. Single-spaced, that jumps to around 500 words per page. Bold text, images, tables, and different fonts all affect the actual count.
Numbers count as words — "2025" is one word. Punctuation marks like commas, full stops, and quotation marks are included in the character count but do not count as words on their own.
Not directly — copy the text from your PDF first. Open the PDF, select all text (Ctrl+A on Windows, Cmd+A on Mac), copy it, and paste it into this tool. If your PDF is a scanned image rather than a text PDF, you will need OCR software to extract the text first.
200 wpm is the widely cited average for silent reading of general online content. It is perfectly normal. Fast readers typically reach 300 to 400 wpm. Speed readers claim 600 wpm or above, though comprehension tends to drop at very high speeds.
Different tools define "word" slightly differently. The most common causes: hyphenated words (one or two?), URLs, numbers adjacent to punctuation, and how leading and trailing spaces are handled. Our counter uses the same logic as Microsoft Word.
Most commercially published debut novels fall between 70,000 and 100,000 words. Thrillers and romance often clock in at 70,000 to 90,000. Epic fantasy can stretch well beyond 100,000. Children's chapter books typically range from 20,000 to 50,000 words depending on the target age group.
No. Your text is processed entirely in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server, stored in a database, or logged. Once you close the tab or clear the input, the text is gone. The tool is completely safe for confidential documents and client work.
Keyword density is the percentage of times a specific word or phrase appears relative to your total word count. SEO best practice suggests keeping it between 0.5% and 2% to signal relevance without triggering over-optimisation penalties. Check your keyword density with our Keyword Density Checker.
Twitter and X enforce a 280-character limit. Spaces and most punctuation count. URLs are automatically shortened to 23 characters regardless of their actual length. Media attachments do not reduce your character allowance.
Divide your word count by 200 for reading time in minutes. So 1,400 words ÷ 200 = 7 minutes. For technical content, divide by 125. For speaking time, divide by 130 for a natural conversational pace.
Multiply your word count by your per-word rate. For example, 2,000 words at $0.10 per word earns $200. Use the freelancer earnings calculator in the stats panel above — paste your text, enter your rate, and the result appears instantly.

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