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πŸ“ Word Counter β€” Free Online Word & Character Count Tool

Paste or type your text below β€” the counts update live as you go.

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Words
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Characters
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No spaces
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Sentences
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Paragraphs
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Reading time

A word counter is the quiet workhorse behind almost every piece of writing that ships β€” the essay that has to reach 1,500 words, the meta description that must stay under 160 characters, the LinkedIn post that gets cut off at 210. This free online word counter measures all of it the instant you type or paste, tracking words, characters, characters without spaces, sentences, paragraphs, and reading time simultaneously and live. There is nothing to click and nothing to install. Everything runs inside your own browser, so the text you paste is never uploaded, stored, or seen by anyone but you.

I built this tool the way I actually wanted to use it while writing client content all day: no ads jammed between the input and the result, no forced sign-up, and no lag when you paste a 5,000-word draft. It is a word count checker that respects your time and your privacy, whether you are a student, a novelist, a marketer, or an SEO specialist checking article depth before publishing.

What This Word Counter Measures

The tool watches six metrics at once and refreshes every one of them on each keystroke:

  • Words β€” every group of characters separated by whitespace. This is the figure academic and editorial word limits refer to.
  • Characters β€” the total including spaces, punctuation, emoji, and symbols. This is the count most social platforms measure against.
  • Characters without spaces β€” a pure glyph count with all whitespace removed, handy for tight typographic layouts and some legacy field limits.
  • Sentences β€” detected by terminal punctuation (. ! ?), giving you a fast sense of sentence density.
  • Paragraphs β€” counted by line breaks, so you can see structure at a glance.
  • Reading time β€” estimated at 200 words per minute, the accepted average for adult silent reading.

Because the character counter and word counter share the same live engine, you never have to choose which one to open β€” both numbers are always in front of you.

How to Use the Online Word Counter

  1. Type or paste your text into the box above. Formatting from Word, Google Docs, or a PDF is stripped automatically, leaving clean plain text to count.
  2. Read the live counts below the box. All six metrics update instantly β€” there is no Count button to press.
  3. Edit in place and watch every number move as you add or trim words, which is the fastest way to land exactly on a target.
  4. Copy or clear using the buttons to grab your text or start fresh.

The counter handles anything from a single tweet to a full manuscript, and it returns results in milliseconds regardless of length.

The Word Counter for Students and Writers

Hitting a word count without breaking your writing flow is the whole point of a live counter. Instead of stopping to check the document properties every paragraph, you glance down and keep moving. These are the targets writers most often work to:

  • Short essays β€” 500–800 words for standard assignments.
  • Undergraduate essays β€” 1,000–1,500 words.
  • Reports and dissertations β€” 2,000–5,000+ words, where tracking by section matters most.
  • Blog posts β€” 1,000–2,000 words for most topics, with competitive keywords rewarding 2,500+.
  • News articles β€” 300–600 words; features run 800–2,000.

The counter works in reverse too: paste someone else's text β€” a brief, a source, a competitor's page β€” to see its length before you start writing your own.

Character Counter for Social Media and SEO Limits

Every platform enforces a character ceiling, and going over it means truncation or rejection. Because this character counter shows both counts at once, you can match whichever method the platform uses:

  • X (Twitter) β€” 280 characters including spaces.
  • SEO meta description β€” 150–160 characters before Google truncates it in results.
  • SEO title tag β€” roughly 60 characters (about 600 pixels) before it gets cut.
  • Google Ads headline β€” 30 characters each.
  • Instagram caption β€” up to 2,200, but only the first 125 show before "more".
  • SMS segment β€” 160 characters before the message splits.

Word Count and SEO: How Long Should Content Be?

There is a persistent myth that longer content automatically ranks higher. It does not. Google's helpful content guidance is explicit that depth, originality, and usefulness matter β€” not raw length. What is true is that thorough content tends to be longer as a side effect of actually answering the question. Industry analyses consistently find most page-one results for competitive queries sit in the 1,500–2,500 word range, but that is a symptom of completeness, not the cause of the ranking.

Use these as rough guardrails, then let the reader decide where you stop:

  • Below 300 words β€” usually too thin to rank for anything meaningful.
  • 500–800 words β€” fine for a simple informational answer.
  • 1,000–2,000 words β€” covers most blog topics with real depth.
  • 2,500–5,000+ words β€” pillar guides for competitive subjects.

Length is one signal among many. Pair this word counter with a keyword density checker to make sure you are not over-optimising, and a readability checker to confirm the writing is easy to read at your target level.

Need content that actually ranks β€” not just content that hits a word count? Our team at Arb Digital plans, writes, and optimises high-performing articles and landing pages every day. Explore our content marketing and copywriting services, or see the full SEO services we offer to turn traffic into customers.

Sentence and Paragraph Counts as a Readability Signal

The sentence and paragraph counters give you a fast structural read on your writing. A high sentence count against a modest word count means short, punchy sentences β€” clear, but choppy if overdone. A low sentence count against a high word count flags long, winding sentences that likely need breaking up. On paragraphs, a 1,500-word article split into only two blocks will read as a wall of text; six to eight focused sections scan far better on screen. You can catch both problems in a glance without re-reading the whole draft.

Reading Time: Setting Reader Expectations

The reading-time estimate uses 200 words per minute, the widely cited average for adult silent reading. Showing "8 min read" at the top of an article sets expectations and measurably reduces bounce. If you are writing for the spoken word instead, delivery runs slower β€” roughly 120–150 words per minute β€” so a speech will take noticeably longer than the on-screen estimate suggests. Email marketers can use the same number in reverse: if the reading time creeps up, the newsletter is probably too long to hold attention.

Best Practices for Getting the Most From a Word Counter

  • Write first, count second. Draft freely, then use the counter to trim or expand toward your target rather than watching the number obsessively.
  • Never pad to a quota. Filler to reach a word count reads as filler and hurts both grades and rankings.
  • Match the right count to the platform. Use characters-with-spaces for social, words for essays, and title/meta character limits for SEO.
  • Clean your case and formatting before final review β€” a case converter is handy for fixing headings and titles fast.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I count words online for free?

Paste or type your text into the box above and this word counter shows the total instantly β€” no button and no sign-up. The count updates live on every keystroke, so it is the fastest way to check length without switching apps.

What is the difference between characters and characters without spaces?

The total character count includes every space, tab, and line break. The no-spaces count excludes all whitespace, leaving only letters, numbers, punctuation, and symbols. Most social platforms measure against the total (with spaces). This tool shows both figures at once.

Can I use this as an essay word counter?

Yes. Paste your essay draft and the current word count appears immediately. Edit directly in the box to add or cut content and the number adjusts live, so you can land on your target without pasting into a separate checker.

Does it count words in other languages?

Yes, for any language that separates words with spaces β€” including Spanish, French, German, and Arabic. Languages without spaces between words, such as Chinese, Japanese, and Thai, return an accurate character count but not an accurate word count.

Is there a limit on how much text I can paste?

No practical limit. Paste a single sentence or an entire book manuscript β€” the tool returns all six counts in milliseconds and the box expands to fit your text.

Is my text stored or sent anywhere?

No. All counting happens locally in your browser with JavaScript. Nothing is uploaded, transmitted, or saved. Your text disappears the moment you close or refresh the page.

Can I paste from Word, Google Docs, or a PDF?

Yes. Copy from any application and paste directly into the box. Formatting is stripped on paste, leaving plain text that counts accurately. For PDFs, copy the text from your reader first.

How is reading time calculated?

Reading time is estimated at 200 words per minute, the standard average for adult silent reading. For spoken delivery, expect it to take longer β€” speech runs closer to 120–150 words per minute.