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Analyze keywords, readability, and social optimization
This content analyzer scans any single webpage the way a search engine and an AI crawler would. In one pass it extracts the keywords your page actually targets, measures how readable the copy is, checks your title and meta description length, inspects Open Graph and Twitter Card tags for social sharing, and confirms whether AI and search bots are allowed to read the page at all.
Instead of guessing what is holding a page back, you get concrete, on-page recommendations: which keywords a page emphasises, whether your target term appears in the right places, where the reading level is too dense, and which meta or social tags are missing, truncated, or duplicated. Everything runs on the live URL, so what you see is exactly what Google and ChatGPT see when they fetch the page.
It is built for one page at a time, which makes it perfect for checking a blog post before you publish, auditing a high-value landing page, or sizing up a competitor's article. When you are ready to scan an entire website at once, the full DarnItSEO Audit crawls every page and rolls the same checks up into a site-wide score.
The tool groups its findings into four scores so you can see at a glance where a page is strong and where it needs work. The Content score looks at your title tag and meta description lengths, your overall word count, and how well the page is structured for search. The Readability score reports a Flesch reading-ease number, an estimated grade level, average words per sentence, and a rough reading time in minutes.
The Social score inspects your Open Graph tags (og:title, og:description, og:image, og:type, og:site_name) and your Twitter Card tags, then warns you when a tag is missing or when a value falls back to a generic default. These are the tags that decide how your link looks when it is shared on X, LinkedIn, Slack, Facebook and iMessage, so a missing image or title can quietly cost you clicks.
Finally, the Keyword score focuses on a single target term you supply. It checks whether that keyword appears in the title, the meta description, the H1 heading, and the URL, and it reports how many times the term appears and at what density. Alongside the target keyword, the analyzer also lists the most frequent keywords it found across the page so you can confirm the content is about what you think it is about.
Each score is colour-coded: green means the page is in good shape, amber means there is room to improve, and red means the issue is likely hurting performance. Treat the red items as your priority list and the amber items as quick wins once the basics are handled.
For keywords, you want your target term to appear in the title, meta description, H1 and ideally the URL, with a natural density rather than an inflated one. If the density is very high, the page may read as keyword-stuffed; if the term is missing from the title or H1, search engines may not understand what the page is meant to rank for. The keyword cloud underneath shows the words the page actually emphasises, which is a fast way to spot when a page has drifted off-topic.
For readability, a higher Flesch score and a lower grade level mean easier reading. Long average sentence lengths and a high grade level are the usual culprits behind dense copy, and the tool surfaces specific suggestions when it detects them. For social, any tag marked Missing should be added so your shared links render with a proper title, description and preview image.
Weak or truncated titles are the most frequent problem. Keep your title tag descriptive and within the length the tool reports as ideal, lead with your target keyword, and make sure each page has a unique title. A missing or duplicate meta description is the next thing to fix: write a single clear sentence that includes the keyword and gives a person a reason to click.
If readability is flagged, shorten your sentences, break long paragraphs into smaller ones, add subheadings, and swap jargon for plainer words. These changes help human readers and also make a page easier for AI systems to quote accurately. If the keyword checks fail, edit the title, H1 and opening paragraph so your target term appears early and naturally rather than being forced in everywhere.
For social tags, add Open Graph and Twitter Card metadata in the page head, including an image at the recommended dimensions, so previews look intentional. If the AI bot or robots checks show that crawlers are blocked, review your robots.txt rules and confirm you are not accidentally disallowing the bots you actually want to index or cite your content.
Beyond classic on-page SEO, the analyzer checks how machines reach your page. It reports whether a robots.txt file exists, lists the sitemaps it declares, and shows which AI and search bots are allowed or blocked. This matters more every year: if you block the crawlers behind AI search and assistants, your content cannot be cited in their answers, no matter how good it is.
It also looks for an llms.txt file (an emerging standard for guiding AI systems to your most important content) and validates your XML sitemap, reporting the URL count and any structural errors it finds. The SSL section confirms your certificate is valid and shows how many days remain before it expires, so an expiring certificate never catches you by surprise.
Together these checks tell you whether the page is technically reachable and trusted, not just well-written. A page can have perfect copy and still underperform if bots are blocked, the sitemap is broken, or the certificate has lapsed.
This analyzer is deliberately focused on one URL at a time, which keeps it fast and free with no signup. It is the right tool when you want to check a specific page before publishing, sanity-check a redesign, or study a single competitor article in detail.
When you need the bigger picture, the DarnItSEO Audit crawls your whole site, runs these same on-page, technical and social checks across every page, and produces a prioritised action plan and a site-wide health score. The Audit is where you catch sitewide patterns such as missing meta descriptions across dozens of pages, recurring readability problems, or template-level social tag bugs.
DarnItSEO also offers focused companion tools you can reach for once this analyzer points you at a problem: the meta tag analyzer for a deeper look at title and description tags, the page speed test for Core Web Vitals and load performance, and the schema tester for validating your structured data and rich-result eligibility. Used together, they cover almost everything that decides how a page performs in both traditional and AI search.
Drop in any public page you want to analyze. Add a target keyword if you want placement and density checks.
We fetch and parse the live page's content, metadata, social tags and bot access in seconds.
Review Content, Readability, Social and Keyword scores, then focus on the red items first.
Fix weak titles, thin or dense sections, missing social tags and blocked crawlers, then re-run to confirm.
Keyword usage and density, target-keyword placement in your title, meta description, H1 and URL, readability, word count, title and meta description length, Open Graph and Twitter Card tags, AI and search bot access, robots.txt, llms.txt, sitemap validity, and SSL status.
Aim for content a general audience can read comfortably: short sentences, plain words and clear structure usually mean a higher Flesch score and a lower grade level. The tool flags sections that are too dense and tells you why.
Type the single term you want the page to rank for. The analyzer then checks whether it appears in the title, meta description, H1 and URL, and reports how many times it shows up and at what density so you can see if it is under- or over-used.
Yes. It inspects your Open Graph and Twitter Card tags so your links preview correctly with the right title, description and image on X, LinkedIn, Slack, Facebook and iMessage, and warns you when a tag is missing.
If your robots.txt blocks the crawlers behind AI search engines and assistants, your content cannot be read or cited in their answers. The analyzer shows which bots are allowed or blocked so you can open access to the ones you want.
Yes. Enter any public URL to see how their on-page content, keywords, readability and metadata are structured, then use the gaps as ideas for your own page.
This tool analyzes one URL at a time and is free with no signup. The DarnItSEO Audit crawls your entire site, runs the same checks across every page, and delivers a prioritised action plan and a site-wide health score.
Pair it with the DarnItSEO meta tag analyzer for deeper title and description checks, the page speed test for Core Web Vitals, and the schema tester to validate your structured data for rich results.
Yes, free with no signup. For a full-site crawl of every page, use the DarnItSEO Audit.