Free Tool

Headline Analyzer

Analyze your headlines for SEO and emotional impact. Get a score and actionable suggestions to improve click-through rates.

Analyze Your Headline
Enter your blog post title or headline to get detailed analysis

Headline Writing Tips

  • Headlines with numbers get 36% more clicks on average
  • Use power words like "proven," "ultimate," "essential," "free"
  • Keep headlines between 6-12 words for optimal engagement
  • Questions can increase curiosity and click-through rates
  • Include your target keyword for better SEO performance

How It Works

1

Enter Your Headline

Type or paste your blog title, email subject line, or any headline you want to analyze.

2

Get Instant Analysis

Our algorithm scores your headline on word count, power words, emotional impact, readability, and SEO factors.

3

Improve with Suggestions

Review the checklist and suggestions to strengthen weak areas and boost your headline score.

Why Use Our Headline Analyzer

Data-Driven Scoring

Get an objective 0-100 score based on proven headline formulas that correlate with higher engagement.

Emotional Impact Analysis

Detect power words and emotional triggers that drive clicks. Headlines with emotion get 7x more engagement.

SEO Optimization Check

Verify character count, word count, and keyword placement to ensure your headline performs in search results.

Actionable Suggestions

Don't just see the score — get specific recommendations to improve your headline before publishing.

Frequently Asked Questions

A score of 70+ is considered good, and 80+ is excellent. The analyzer evaluates word count (6-12 words ideal), use of numbers, power words, emotional words, readability, and overall structure.

Power words are persuasive terms that trigger emotional or psychological responses, like 'proven,' 'ultimate,' 'essential,' 'free,' 'secret,' and 'guaranteed.' Headlines with power words consistently get higher click-through rates.

Yes. Google typically displays 50-60 characters in search results. Headlines longer than that get truncated. For social media sharing, shorter headlines (6-12 words) also tend to get more engagement.

Not always, but headlines with numbers tend to get 36% more clicks. Odd numbers and specific numbers (like '7' or '13') perform particularly well. Use numbers when the content format supports it (listicles, tips, statistics).

Yes, the same principles that make a great blog headline apply to email subject lines. Power words, emotional triggers, and optimal length all impact email open rates just as they impact click-through rates in search.

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