Keyword Research Lab

Find high-value, low-competition keywords for your content. Analyze search intent, volume trends, and semantic variations to build a winning SEO strategy.

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Technical Audit

This utility is a high-performance node optimized for modern browser environments. All data processing is executed client-side, ensuring zero knowledge transfer to external servers.

Keyword trend visualization
Semantic variation generator
Search intent classification
Competitive difficulty score

System FAQ

How do I find low competition keywords for free?

Use this tool to search your topic. Look for keywords with moderate search volume (500-5,000 monthly) and lower difficulty scores. Long-tail keywords (4+ words) are typically easier to rank for than single-word terms.

What is keyword difficulty and what score is rankable?

Keyword difficulty (KD) scores how hard it is to rank on the first page. Scores 0-30 = easy (new sites can rank), 30-60 = medium (needs some authority), 60+ = hard (needs strong domain authority and backlinks).

How many keywords should I target per page?

Target one primary keyword and 3-5 related secondary keywords per page. Trying to rank for too many unrelated keywords confuses search engines about your page's topic.

What is search intent and why does it matter?

Search intent is the reason behind a query — informational (learn something), navigational (find a site), transactional (buy something), or commercial (compare options). Matching your content to the correct intent is crucial for ranking.

What are long-tail keywords?

Long-tail keywords are longer, more specific phrases (usually 3-5 words) like 'best free keyword research tool for beginners'. They have lower volume but higher conversion rates and are much easier to rank for than short head keywords.

How often should I do keyword research?

Do keyword research before writing any new piece of content. Also revisit existing pages every 6-12 months — search trends change, and updating pages for new keywords can recover or improve rankings.

What is a content gap and how do I find gap keywords?

A content gap is a topic your competitors rank for but you don't. To find gap keywords, compare your top-ranking pages against competitors in your niche and look for keywords with decent volume where you have zero presence. These are often faster to rank for than brand-new topics.

Can I do keyword research without a Google account?

Yes. This tool requires no Google account or login. Unlike Google Keyword Planner (which requires an active Ads account), you can research keywords, check difficulty, and analyze intent instantly without any registration.