Keyword Extractor guide

How to use the Keyword Extractor

The Keyword Extractor finds repeated words and short phrases in pasted text. It is useful for drafts, notes, and content planning when you want to see what the text talks about most. Use this guide to understand what to enter, how to read the output, and what to double-check before relying on the result.

Open the Keyword Extractor

Quick start

  1. Paste the text you want to inspect.
  2. Press Extract keywords.
  3. Review the top words and phrases.
  4. Use the list as topic clues, then choose natural wording yourself.

Best uses

These are the situations this tool is meant for. If your task is close to one of these, the examples and notes below can help you choose the right inputs.

  • Find topic words in a blog draft or study passage.
  • Clean up repeated terms before writing a title or summary.
  • Compare what a page talks about against what you meant it to cover.
  • Create a first-pass keyword list without uploading text.

What this AI tool does

The Keyword Extractor finds repeated words and short phrases in pasted text. It is useful for drafts, notes, and content planning when you want to see what the text talks about most.

The important privacy idea is simple: your input runs in the browser tab. Access Free Tools does not need to receive the image or text for the tool to work.

For this first self-hosted pass, OCR files and the starter text classifier files are served from Access Free Tools after you click the tool button. Heavier experimental model tools may still download model files from a third-party model host until we self-host more models.

How to read the result

Start with the main result, then read the supporting notes. Browser AI tools are useful helpers, but they can still be wrong, incomplete, or unsure.

  • Higher counts mean a term appears more often in the pasted text.
  • Phrases can show repeated topics better than single words.
  • The result is not a ranking tool or search-volume tool.

Common mistakes to avoid

The safest way to use the result is to compare it with the original input and think about the real task you are doing.

  • Do not stuff every keyword into a page title.
  • Do not ignore search intent, reader clarity, or the actual question being answered.
  • Do not treat brand names and repeated filler words as automatically useful keywords.

Research and references

These references shaped the tool behavior, browser-only model approach, privacy notes, and result limits.

Examples from the calculator

Blog draft Paste a 400-word article draft

Top words and phrases

Product notes Paste feature notes

Repeated topic clues

Class notes Paste study notes

Main vocabulary list

FAQ in plain language

When should I use the Keyword Extractor?

Use it when you want a quick browser-side AI helper for this task: Find topic words in a blog draft or study passage. Clean up repeated terms before writing a title or summary. It is best for drafts, checks, and learning, not final expert decisions.

What do the main Keyword Extractor inputs mean?

Paste the page, paragraph, caption, notes, or draft you want to inspect. The tool removes common filler words and looks for repeated topic words and short phrases.

How should I read the Keyword Extractor result?

Read the keyword list as topic clues. Higher counts usually mean a word or phrase appears more often, not that it is automatically the best SEO keyword.

What should I double-check before trusting the Keyword Extractor?

Check search intent, natural wording, duplicates, brand names, and context before using a keyword list in a title, blog, or product page.

Does this AI tool upload my input to Access Free Tools?

No. The tool runs in your browser tab. Your text or image is not uploaded to Access Free Tools. OCR plus the first text model are served from Access Free Tools after you click the button; some experimental model tools may still download model files from a third-party model host until we self-host more models.

Why can the first run take longer than normal?

The first run may need to download model, OCR, or language data into the browser. After that, the browser can often reuse cached files, but speed still depends on your device, browser, and internet connection.

Related tools

Privacy and copying results

Recent answers stay visible only while you work in the current browser tab. They are not sent to a server.

Use Copy answer when you want to paste the expression and result into notes, homework, a message, or another document. Check the units and assumptions before copying.