WordsPolish.

Free text & writing tools.
Nothing you type ever leaves your browser.

28 client-side tools for counting, converting, cleaning, comparing, and generating text — plus 12 platform character-limit references. No accounts, no servers, no tracking of what you write.

Try it right here

Paste or type anything below and watch the word, character, sentence, paragraph, reading-time, and keyword-density counts update as you go — the same live panel that lives on the full word counter page. Nothing you type here is ever sent anywhere; every number is computed by your own browser.

Stats appear here the moment you start typing.

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Words

0

Characters

0

Chars (no spaces)

0

Sentences

0

Paragraphs

under a minute

Reading time

under a minute

Speaking time

Most-used tools

See all 28 tools →

Platform character limits

See all 12 platform limits →

Why WordsPolish

Most free text-tool sites quietly send whatever you paste to a server to "process" it.WordsPolish doesn't: every counter, converter, cleaner, comparer, and generator here runs in your own browser's JavaScript engine, so a half-finished manuscript, an unpublished blog draft, or a client's confidential copy never travels anywhere. That also means the tools work offline once the page has loaded, and there's no per-request latency waiting on a round trip. See /methodology/ for exactly how each calculation works.

The whole site is organized around five plain categories rather than one long, undifferentiated tool list: counting tools measure text you already have (words, characters, sentences, syllables, reading time), converting tools reshape text into a different valid format (case styles, URL slugs, sorted lists), cleaning tools strip out formatting noise picked up from PDFs, Word, and rich-text paste, comparing tools find differences between two drafts or repeated words within one, and generating tools produce new text — placeholder copy, random prompts, or stylized Unicode text. Every one of the 28 tools sits in exactly one of those five groups, and each group has its own hub page explaining what actually distinguishes the tools inside it.

The platform-limit pages exist for a narrower, more literal reason: X, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, and the rest each enforce their own character limits, and those limits change over time without much announcement. Each /limits/ page states the current figure, the date it was last checked, and the source it was checked against, rather than repeating a number that might already be stale by the time you read it.

The people who reach for these tools tend to have a deadline and a limit in front of them: a student trimming an essay to a strict word count, a marketer fitting an ad into a fixed character allowance, a writer checking reading time before publishing, or a developer cleaning line breaks and case out of pasted data. Every result is one tap to copy, every tool loads instantly with no cookie wall or interstitial ad, and the layout is built thumb-first so it works the same on a phone as on a desktop. There is no "pro" tier that unlocks the real features — the free tools are the whole product, and the single optional pack is just an offline, printable companion for people who want one.

FAQ

Is anything I type actually sent to a server?
No. Every tool on WordsPolish runs entirely client-side, in your browser's own JavaScript. Text you paste or type is never transmitted anywhere — see /methodology/ for the technical detail.
Do I need an account to use these tools?
No account, no sign-up, no paywall on any of the 28 core tools. They're free to use as often as you like.
Why are there platform-specific limit pages?
X, Instagram, YouTube, and other platforms each enforce different, changing character limits. The /limits/ pages preload the counter to the exact limit for that platform so you don't have to remember the number.
Is there a catch — ads, upsells, a paywall after a few uses?
No paywall and no usage cap on any of the core tools. There's one optional paid add-on (an offline reference pack for people who specifically want a printable cheat-sheet), but every tool and every platform-limit page works fully, indefinitely, for free.
How is a page's word or character count actually calculated?
Each tool's own page explains its exact method — word count splits on whitespace, character count offers with- and without-spaces figures, and so on. /methodology/ has the full technical breakdown of every calculation this site performs, including the specific reading-speed and syllable-counting figures used elsewhere.