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Measure keyword frequency and density for SEO content optimization.
Use Keyword Density Checker to understand word frequency, repeated phrases, stop-word balance, and topical focus in a draft. Density is a diagnostic metric, not a ranking formula. The goal is to find missing topics, unnatural repetition, thin sections, and confusing emphasis so the page can read better for people while still being clear to search engines.
Rewrite repeated phrases naturally and add supporting context instead of chasing a fixed density percentage.
Add useful explanations, examples, or headings that genuinely belong on the page.
Focus on meaningful nouns, verbs, entities, and phrases rather than treating every common word as a problem.
Use density as an editorial signal alongside search intent, originality, internal links, and page quality.
Keyword analysis runs in the browser for normal use. Avoid pasting confidential drafts, client strategy documents, or unreleased campaign copy on shared devices unless the text is approved for review.
Use the main body text or a representative section instead of navigation and boilerplate.
Look for repeated keywords, missing entities, and wording that feels forced.
Improve headings, examples, and natural language before checking the copy again.
Paste your article, page copy, or product description.
Enable stop-word exclusion and select top results count.
See counts and density percentages for top terms.
See exact share of each keyword.
Exclude common words for cleaner SEO insight.
Ranked keyword list with count and density.
Check a draft for repeated money keywords and rewrite sections that sound unnatural.
Analyze a utility page after adding FAQs to confirm the main topic is clear without stuffing.
There is no fixed perfect value. Keep usage natural and avoid keyword stuffing.
Treat density as a quick editorial check, not a scoring system. Strong pages answer intent, cover related entities, and read naturally even when a keyword appears less often.
Look for missing related terms, repeated phrases, thin explanations, and places where headings or examples could better match search intent.
Stop words help reveal readability patterns, but meaningful topics, entities, and phrase coverage usually matter more than common words.
No. It should support a broader review of originality, usefulness, structure, internal links, search intent, and trust signals.
Look for patterns, not a magic score. Repetition may be normal for technical terms, but it can also reveal filler, awkward phrasing, or a page that needs synonyms and clearer section structure.
Keep them visible when reviewing readability or phrase context. Remove them when you want a cleaner view of topical nouns, verbs, brands, products, and repeated search-intent terms.
Compare the terms with the page purpose, headings, FAQs, and competitor expectations. Add helpful explanations where terms are missing and remove repeated phrasing that makes the page feel automated.
It can show when a page repeats a small set of terms without enough supporting explanations, entities, or examples. Use that signal to add helpful sections rather than simply increasing keyword repetition.
Phrases usually tell you more about search intent than isolated words. Review two-word and three-word phrases alongside headings and FAQs to see whether the page matches how users describe the topic.