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Twitter / X Counter

Count tweet characters with accurate URL handling.

Account limit
Weighted count121 / 280
159 characters remaining
URLs detected1Each link counts as 23 characters, however long it is — Twitter wraps every URL in a t.co link.
Plain characters135The raw character count, for reference. The weighted count above is what X checks.
Processed on your device. We never see your files.

How to use Twitter / X Counter

What this tool does

This Twitter / X counter measures a tweet the same way the platform does. You type or paste a tweet into the box and it shows a live weighted count against the limit, a progress bar, the characters remaining, the number of URLs it detected, and the plain character count for reference. A toggle switches the limit between the standard 280 characters and the 4,000 characters available to X Premium subscribers.

The key word is weighted. Twitter does not simply count keystrokes. URLs are each counted as 23 characters, and emoji and CJK characters are counted as two each. This tool applies those exact rules, so the number it reports is the number X will enforce when you hit post. It loads with a sample tweet that includes a link, so you can immediately see the 23-character URL rule in action.

Why the weighted count matters

If you count a tweet by eye, or with a generic character counter, you will get the wrong answer whenever it contains a link or an emoji. A 60-character URL looks like it should eat 60 characters of your budget — but Twitter only charges you 23 for it. Conversely, a tweet that looks comfortably under 280 can be over the limit once a few emoji are added at two characters each.

Getting this right matters because the limit is hard. X will not let you post a tweet that exceeds it, and discovering that mid-post breaks your flow. Knowing the true weighted count as you draft lets you trim with confidence, decide whether a link is worth its 23 characters, and judge whether you need to split a thought into a thread.

How to use it

  1. Type or paste your tweet into the box. The weighted count, progress bar and breakdown update as you type.
  2. Choose your account limit with the toggle: Standard (280) for a regular account, or X Premium (4,000) if you subscribe.
  3. Read the weighted count shown as count / limit. Green means you have room, amber means you are close, and red means you are over and X will reject the tweet.
  4. Check the URLs detected figure — each link counts as 23 characters regardless of its real length.
  5. Use the plain characters figure if you just want the raw count, then Copy tweet to copy your final text.

Platform tips and best practices

Shorter tweets tend to travel further. Leaving headroom under 280 gives space for people to quote-tweet you with their own comment, and tweets that are quick to read get more engagement. Treat 280 as the ceiling, not the goal.

When you include a link, remember it always costs 23 characters — there is no benefit to shortening a URL yourself, because t.co does it anyway. If a single tweet cannot hold your point, write a thread: each tweet in the thread gets its own fresh limit. For longer-form posts, X Premium’s 4,000-character limit is an option, but most replies and timelines still show only a preview, so a strong first line matters even more.

Common mistakes to avoid

The biggest mistake is trusting a plain character counter for a tweet that contains a link or emoji — the weighted count is the only one X cares about. Another is padding a tweet to use the full 280 just because the space exists; brevity usually wins. Avoid stuffing several links into one tweet, since each adds 23 characters and the post quickly looks spammy. And do not assume the 4,000-character limit applies to you — it only applies to X Premium accounts, so check the toggle is set correctly before you write long.

Privacy and your data

This counter runs entirely in your browser. The weighted calculation, URL detection and every figure it shows are produced by JavaScript on your own device. Your tweet text is never sent to Twitter / X, never uploaded to any server, never stored between visits and never logged. When you clear the box or close the tab, the draft is gone. You can safely use it for unpublished announcements, sensitive wording or anything you would rather not put online before you are ready.

Frequently asked questions

How many characters can a tweet be?
A standard Twitter / X account can post up to 280 characters per tweet. X Premium subscribers can post much longer tweets — up to 4,000 characters. This tool lets you toggle between the two limits and shows your weighted count against whichever one you select.
Do URLs count toward the tweet character limit?
Yes, but not by their real length. Twitter / X wraps every link in a t.co shortener, so each URL counts as exactly 23 characters no matter how long or short it is. This tool detects URLs in your text and applies the 23-character weight, which is why the weighted count can differ from the plain character count.
Why does my tweet count differ from the plain character count?
Twitter / X uses a weighted count. URLs count as 23 characters each, and CJK characters (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) and emoji count as two characters each, while most Latin letters count as one. The tool shows both figures: the weighted count is what X checks against the limit, and the plain count is the raw number of characters for reference.
How long should a tweet be for engagement?
Shorter tweets often outperform longer ones — many studies put the sweet spot around 70 to 100 characters, which leaves room for replies, quote tweets and added context. The 280-character limit is a ceiling, not a target. Use the extra space when a thought genuinely needs it, not by default.
Is my tweet text private when I use this counter?
Yes. The weighted count, URL detection and character breakdown are all calculated by JavaScript in your browser. Nothing you type is sent to Twitter / X or to any server, nothing is stored, and nothing is logged. Your draft stays entirely on your device.

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