Keyword Research Tool

Research keyword ideas from a page URL and review top search phrases.

Free Keyword Research Tool for Page-Level Ideas

The Keyword Research Tool starts from a page URL and turns the page text into a short list of keyword phrases. Instead of asking you to invent seed terms first, it uses the submitted page as the reference point, extracts readable content, and shows the strongest multi-word phrases in a result table. This is useful when a real page already exists and the next decision is whether the page has a clear keyword direction.

The output is intentionally compact. It does not pretend to replace a full SEO platform with ranking history, backlink data, or search-volume reports. Its value is the first diagnostic step: seeing what language a page already emphasizes before you rewrite headings, build supporting content, or compare the page against a target topic.

How to Research Keywords From a Page URL

  1. Paste the page or domain value into the visible Enter URL field.
  2. Check that the address points to the page you actually want to review.
  3. Select Research Keyword.
  4. Read the result table, which lists numbered keyword phrases under the Keyword column.

The page does not show controls for copying, exporting, uploading files, or choosing a country database. Treat the table as a quick content review, then copy any phrases manually into your notes if you want to compare them with a larger keyword plan.

What the Result Table Tells You

The result highlights repeated two-word and three-word phrases found in the page text. These phrases can reveal whether the page is already centered around the subject you intended or whether unrelated wording dominates the visible copy. A service page about local SEO, for example, should not return mostly generic phrases that say little about the service, location, audience, or problem being solved.

Look for phrases that are specific enough to describe the page. A result such as “technical audit,” “product schema,” or “local rankings” is more useful than an isolated broad word because it shows a clearer topic relationship. If the strongest phrases do not match the page’s target intent, the page may need tighter headings, clearer body copy, or a better internal-link context.

When This Tool Is Useful

  • Before rewriting a page: check what terms the current version already repeats.
  • During a content audit: compare the extracted phrases with the page’s intended search intent.
  • After publishing new copy: confirm that the main topic is visible in the text, not buried under unrelated wording.
  • When reviewing a competitor page: collect language clues before building your own outline.

If you already know the main topic and need more supporting phrases, use the Related Keywords Finder. If you are reviewing a finished draft for overuse, run the text or URL through the Keyword Density Checker. When the research turns into a naming task, the Domain Name Generator can test keyword-led domain ideas.

How to Use the Phrases Without Over-Optimizing

The phrase list should guide editing, not dictate every sentence. A page can mention its subject naturally without repeating one phrase in every paragraph. Use the result to identify gaps: missing service terms, weak product language, vague headings, or body copy that does not support the title. Then improve the page in a way that helps the reader understand the offer, not only in a way that adds more keywords.

Google’s people-first guidance is a useful editorial check here: content should help visitors achieve their goal, not exist mainly to manipulate rankings. The best outcome from this tool is a clearer page that describes the topic accurately and gives users enough context to decide what to do next.

Example Review: A Thin Service Page

Imagine a consultant has a page titled “SEO Services,” but most of the body copy repeats broad phrases such as “grow online” and “digital success.” Running the page through this tool may show that the strongest phrases are too generic to support the real service. The next edit would be to add concrete sections for audits, technical fixes, content planning, reporting, and local or ecommerce SEO if those services are actually offered.

After the rewrite, running the URL again should produce more specific phrases. That does not guarantee rankings, but it gives the editor a clearer signal that the page language now matches the service more closely.

Limits of a URL-Based Keyword Check

This tool can only analyze text it can fetch from the submitted address. Navigation labels, hidden blocks, scripts, blocked pages, login-only content, and heavily rendered sections may not provide the same signal a full crawler or browser audit would show. If the table looks empty or unrelated, first verify that the page is public and that the visible copy contains the topic you expected.

It also does not provide search volume, ranking difficulty, SERP data, or competitor ranking positions. Treat the phrase list as a content clue, then validate important targets in your broader SEO research process before changing page titles, URLs, or navigation labels.

Who Gets the Most Value From This Page

Editors can use it to check whether a draft page has a clear topic. SEO reviewers can use it as a fast pre-audit note before deeper keyword tools. Site owners can use it when a page feels vague but they are not sure which terms dominate the copy. Developers and product teams can use it after template changes to confirm that important page text still appears in the rendered source the analyzer can read.