Find autocomplete-style keyword ideas grouped by intent, so you can plan content around real search behaviour without pretending every idea has a fake score.
Uses autocomplete-style suggestions for planning. Exact search volume, CPC, and difficulty are only shown when the data is reliable enough.
Fair use: generous free searches with a short cooldown.
Use a broad keyword first, then explore the grouped results.
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Keyword ideas grouped by search intent.
Turn questions into headings, comparisons into articles, and buyer terms into review or list pages.
No fake metrics or difficulty numbers. This is an idea list for planning, not a ranking promise.
| # | Keyword Idea | Type |
|---|
How to use this tool
Begin with a simple topic like "email marketing". The tool expands it into more specific searches.
Questions are useful for blog posts, FAQs, help pages, and beginner guides.
If several keywords mean the same thing, use them on one strong page instead of making thin pages.
Words like "best", "vs", "review", and "pricing" often show someone is closer to a decision.
About this tool
This keyword research tool expands a seed topic into search-style phrases. Instead of giving you one flat list, it groups ideas by intent so you can quickly see questions, comparisons, buyer terms, local searches, modifiers, and general topic ideas.
It is designed for the first stage of SEO planning. Use it when you know the broad topic you want to write about, but you need better angles, clearer wording, and a stronger idea of what people may actually type into Google.
The tool does not show exact search volume or keyword difficulty yet. That is intentional. Bad volume data can make a small site chase the wrong terms. This page focuses on useful keyword discovery first, then you can judge the ideas by intent, relevance, and how well they fit your site.
Blog topics, service pages, comparison posts, beginner guides, FAQ ideas, and early content planning.
Exact traffic forecasting, guaranteed rankings, competitor spying, or final keyword difficulty decisions.
Use a plain seed keyword, such as email marketing, coffee grinder, local plumber, or content planning.
Look at questions for educational content, comparisons for decision pages, and buyer terms for commercial pages.
Do not make a separate page for every small variation. Similar phrases often belong on one stronger page.
Pick the keyword group that matches your audience, your site, and the kind of page you can actually make useful.
Yes. The core keyword research tool is free to use and does not require an account.
Intent helps you understand the job behind the search. A question keyword, a comparison keyword, and a buyer keyword usually need different page types.
No. Use the results as a planning list. Remove irrelevant ideas, group close variations, then build one useful page around one clear topic.