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Word Counter

Count words, characters, and reading time in real time.

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Words
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Characters
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Characters (no spaces)
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Sentences
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Paragraphs
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Lines
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Reading time
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Speaking time
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Avg. word length
Most-used words

Type some text above to see which words appear most often.

Processed on your device. We never see your files.

How to use Word Counter

What this tool does

The Word & Character Counter measures a piece of text the moment you type or paste it. It reports the number of words, characters with and without spaces, sentences, paragraphs and lines. It also estimates how long the text takes to read silently and to read aloud, works out the average word length, and lists the ten words you used most often. Every figure updates live as you edit — there is no button to press and no waiting. All of the counting happens inside your browser, so the text never leaves your device.

Why you might need it

Almost every writing task comes with a limit or a target. A meta description needs to sit under roughly 160 characters, a tweet has its own ceiling, an essay has a minimum word count, and an SMS message is billed per segment. Manually counting is slow and error-prone, and the count built into a word processor is not always visible or trustworthy. A dedicated counter gives you the number instantly and breaks it down several ways at once.

The extra statistics matter too. Reading time helps you judge whether a blog post or email is the right length for its audience. Speaking time is useful when you are drafting a presentation, a podcast script or a video voiceover and need to hit a slot. The most-used words list is a quick check for repetition — if one word dominates, your prose may feel monotonous, and if a filler word keeps surfacing you can decide whether to trim it.

How to use it

  1. Type directly into the text box, or paste text copied from anywhere.
  2. Watch the statistics grid update with every keystroke — no submit step.
  3. Read off whichever number you need: words and characters sit at the top, followed by sentences, paragraphs, lines and the time estimates.
  4. Scroll to the Most-used words section to see your top ten words ranked by frequency, each shown with its count.
  5. Use Copy list to grab the frequency list, or Clear to start over. Load sample drops in a short passage if you just want to try the tool.

Common pitfalls

A few results surprise people, and knowing why prevents confusion. Hyphenated compounds and words joined by punctuation count as a single word, because the splitter only breaks on whitespace. The sentence count relies on terminal punctuation, so an abbreviation such as “Inc.” or a decimal like “3.5” can be read as the end of a sentence and inflate the total. Paragraphs are separated by a blank line, so text where every line is a new “paragraph” without blank lines between them will report as one paragraph. The line count, by contrast, follows literal line breaks, so a long passage that wraps visually but has no newline characters counts as a single line.

Average word length counts only letters and digits inside each word, ignoring attached punctuation, so a trailing comma or quotation mark does not distort the figure.

Tips and advanced use

Use the no-spaces character count when a platform measures only visible characters — some legacy systems and certain database fields work that way. When you are writing to a strict limit, paste your draft, trim until the number fits, and you have a guarantee before you submit. For SEO work, keep an eye on the character count of titles and descriptions as you write them rather than discovering a truncation later.

Treat the most-used words list as a light editing aid. After a long draft, scan the top ten: seeing a vague verb or a crutch phrase near the top is a prompt to vary your language. Reading and speaking times are best used for relative comparison — checking that version B of a script is shorter than version A — rather than as a precise stopwatch. And because the whole tool runs client-side, it is perfectly safe to paste confidential drafts, unpublished articles or internal documents; none of that content is ever transmitted or retained anywhere.

Frequently asked questions

Is my text sent to a server?
No. Every count — words, characters, sentences, reading time and the rest — is calculated by JavaScript running inside your own browser. Nothing you type is uploaded, logged or stored, which you can verify in your browser's Network tab.
How is the word count calculated?
The tool trims your text and splits it on any run of whitespace, so each block of non-space characters counts as one word. This matches how most word processors count, though hyphenated terms like 'state-of-the-art' count as a single word.
How accurate is the reading and speaking time?
Reading time assumes about 200 words per minute and speaking time about 150 words per minute, which are common averages for adults. Your real pace depends on the material and audience, so treat these figures as estimates rather than exact numbers.
Why does the sentence count look off?
Sentences are detected by counting groups of text that end in a period, question mark or exclamation point. Abbreviations like 'e.g.' or decimal numbers can be miscounted, so the figure is a close estimate rather than a guarantee.
Does it count characters with or without spaces?
Both. The tool shows characters including spaces and a separate count with all whitespace removed, so you can match whichever limit a form or platform applies.

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