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Keyword Extractor

Extract short-tail and long-tail keywords from pasted content or any accessible public webpage URL with frequency and density insights.

Keyword Extractor

Extract short-tail and long-tail keywords from content or a public webpage.

Words analyzed

0

Unique words

0

Short-Tail Keywords

Focused one-word and two-word keyword topics.

Paste content or fetch a URL to find short-tail keywords.

Long-Tail Keywords

Specific three-word to five-word search phrases.

Long-tail keyword phrases will appear here.

Results are content-based keyword ideas, not search-volume data. Validate promising terms against search intent, competition, and reliable keyword research data before targeting them.

About this tool

Free Keyword Extractor

Use the free WebToolsEdge Keyword Extractor to find meaningful short-tail and long-tail keyword ideas inside an article, landing page, product description, competitor page, or other readable web content. Paste text directly or enter a public webpage URL, then review recurring topics and specific phrases with their frequency and content density. The keyword extractor from text works entirely from the words in the content you provide. It normalizes capitalization, filters common English stop words, counts useful terms, and analyzes contiguous phrases. Short-tail results contain one-word and two-word topics, while long-tail results contain more specific phrases of three to five words. To extract keywords from a website, open the Analyze URL tab and enter a public HTTP or HTTPS page. The server retrieves readable HTML text with strict timeout, response-size, content-type, redirect, and private-network protections. Scripts, styles, navigation markup, and raw tags are removed before keyword analysis. Pages behind a login, blocked by robots or security services, rendered only through client-side JavaScript, or inaccessible to the server may not return usable content. A short-tail keyword is usually a broad one-word or two-word topic, such as “keyword research” or “SEO tools.” These terms can describe the main subject but often have broad intent and strong competition. A long-tail keyword is a longer and more specific phrase, such as “extract long tail keywords from content.” Long-tail phrases can reveal detailed questions, features, use cases, and subtopics present in a page. The long-tail keyword extractor ranks phrases using occurrence frequency and phrase length. Repeated phrases generally receive stronger relevance scores, while useful phrases that appear once can still surface when the content is relatively short. Switch sorting between Relevance, Frequency, and A–Z, and display the top 10, 20, or 30 results in each group. Keyword count shows how many times an exact normalized term or phrase appears. Density compares the number of words represented by those occurrences with the total analyzed word count. Density is descriptive, not a target score. Search engines do not require a fixed keyword percentage, and forcing repeated phrases can make content less useful or appear spammy. This online keyword finder is useful for understanding a draft before publishing, reviewing competitor topic coverage, creating a content brief, identifying product terminology, discovering repeated themes in customer feedback, and finding phrases for headings or FAQ ideas. It can also help reveal when a page focuses too heavily on a narrow term or does not clearly mention its intended subject. After extraction, click any keyword to copy it, copy all short-tail or long-tail results as a list, or download both groups as a TXT report. URL-derived text remains editable, so you can remove menus, legal copy, or unrelated sections and immediately refine the results. The tool does not access Google Keyword Planner, Search Console, advertising databases, search-volume data, keyword difficulty, trends, or live search results. It extracts language from the supplied content only. A phrase appearing prominently on a page does not prove people search for it or that the page can rank for it. For a stronger SEO workflow, use extracted phrases as research clues. Check whether each term matches the page’s audience and intent, compare it with reliable search data, group closely related variants, and choose one clear primary topic with supporting subtopics. Then review usage with the Keyword Density Checker and inspect broader page elements with the SEO Analyzer. Avoid copying a competitor’s wording or treating every extracted phrase as a recommendation. Create original, helpful content that answers the user’s need. Keyword extraction is most valuable when combined with human judgment, accurate subject knowledge, natural writing, and a technically sound page.

After finding useful phrases, measure their natural usage with the Keyword Density Checker, then review titles, headings, links, and page structure with the SEO Analyzer. Browse all SEO Tools for the complete workflow.

Step by step

How to use Keyword Extractor

  1. 1

    Choose Paste Content to analyze your own text, or Analyze URL to fetch readable text from a public webpage.

  2. 2

    Paste an article, landing page, product description, or other content; for URL mode, enter the full public page address and click Fetch & Extract.

  3. 3

    Review the word count and the separate short-tail and long-tail keyword groups.

  4. 4

    Sort by relevance, frequency, or alphabetical order and choose how many results to display.

  5. 5

    Click an individual keyword to copy it, or use the copy button for an entire group.

  6. 6

    Download the TXT report and validate useful ideas with search intent, competition, and reliable keyword research data.

Highlights

Keyword Extractor features

Keyword extraction from pasted text

Secure readable-text extraction from public webpage URLs

One-word and two-word short-tail keyword discovery

Three-word to five-word long-tail phrase extraction

Frequency, density, and relevance ranking

Relevance, frequency, and A–Z sorting

Top 10, 20, or 30 results per group

Per-keyword copy, copy-all, and TXT download

Questions

Keyword Extractor FAQ

What is a keyword extractor?+

A keyword extractor analyzes supplied content and identifies recurring or contextually useful words and phrases. This tool separates broad short-tail topics from more specific long-tail phrases.

Can I extract keywords from a website URL?+

Yes. Enter an accessible public HTML webpage URL. Some login-protected, blocked, oversized, non-HTML, or JavaScript-only pages may not provide readable content.

What is the difference between short-tail and long-tail keywords?+

Short-tail keywords are broad one-word or two-word topics. Long-tail keywords are more specific phrases, commonly three or more words, that express narrower intent.

How are the keyword results ranked?+

Relevance considers exact occurrence frequency and phrase length. You can also sort strictly by frequency or alphabetically.

Does the tool show monthly search volume or keyword difficulty?+

No. Results come only from the supplied page or text. The tool does not query Google, advertising platforms, trend data, or commercial SEO databases.

Does a high keyword density improve rankings?+

Not automatically. There is no universal ideal density. Helpful coverage, search intent, readability, originality, expertise, internal linking, and technical SEO are more meaningful than repeating a phrase.

Can I use extracted competitor keywords in my content?+

Use them as research clues, not copy instructions. Validate relevance and search demand, then create original content that serves your own audience.

Why do navigation or footer words appear in URL results?+

The tool removes markup and non-content elements, but page templates can still contain visible navigation or footer text. Edit the fetched content to remove unrelated sections and refine the results.

Is pasted content stored?+

Pasted text is analyzed in your browser. URL mode temporarily fetches the public page through the server to return readable text; the tool does not intentionally save that page content.

How should I use these keywords for SEO?+

Choose terms that match user intent, validate them with reliable research data, group related phrases, and use them naturally in genuinely useful content rather than forcing every result onto the page.