Tutorials

Word Counter: a quick guide

Count words, characters, sentences and reading time as you type.

The ChrysoKit Word Counter shows words, characters, sentences and paragraphs as you type, with estimated reading and speaking times next to the headline counts.

Why use it

Word and character limits matter for everything from blog excerpts to social posts to academic essays. A live counter removes the need to stop, copy out, paste back.

How to use the Word Counter

  1. Paste or type your text.
  2. Watch the counts update live.
  3. Read the estimated reading and speaking times next to the counts.
  4. Use the most-frequent words list to spot overused phrases.

Features worth knowing

Live counts

Words, characters, sentences and paragraphs update on every keystroke.

Reading and speaking time

Reading time assumes about 225 words per minute (average adult). Speaking time assumes about 130 words per minute. Both are sensible defaults for prose; dense technical material reads slower.

Most-frequent words

A small breakdown of the words you use most often. A quick way to spot a phrase you have over-relied on.

Pro tips

  • 225 wpm is a fair estimate for non-technical prose. Dense technical material will read closer to 150; light copy can hit 250 or more.
  • Sentence count is a quick readability indicator. If your average words-per-sentence is over 25, you probably want to split some up.
  • The most-frequent words list quickly reveals overused phrases. Cut them out and the writing tightens.

Privacy first. The Word Counter runs entirely in your browser. Nothing you paste is uploaded.

Use the Word Counter for blog drafts, social posts, abstracts and academic writing. It is one of those small tools you stop noticing because it is just always there.

Open the tool: Word Counter →

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ChrysoKit Team

The team behind ChrysoKit. We build small, useful, fast, free tools for people who would rather get on with their day than fight a website.