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Blog Title Generator

Generate 30 catchy blog title ideas from any topic.

Free Blog Title Generator — Create Compelling Headlines That Rank and Get Clicked

A blog post with a weak title gets ignored in search results even if the content is excellent. Conversely, a compelling title can double the click-through rate of an already-ranking post without changing a word of the article. The difference between a 2% CTR and a 5% CTR on the same search ranking is a 150% increase in traffic — from the title alone. This generator produces 30+ title variations using the formulas that consistently earn high CTR across industries.

How to use this generator

Enter your main topic or target keyword in the first field — be as specific as possible ("email marketing for SaaS companies" produces better titles than just "email marketing"). Optionally add your target audience or niche ("B2B marketers", "beginner runners", "React developers") to get titles with audience-specific language. Drag the count slider to choose how many titles you want (up to 50). Click Generate and browse the results. Hover over any title to copy it individually, or use Copy All to grab the full list. Use the titles as-is, combine elements from different variants, or use them as inspiration for your own angle.

The title formats that drive the most clicks

Listicles with specific numbers ("7 Ways", "11 Tools") consistently outperform vague equivalents because they set a clear expectation. How-to titles with a specific outcome ("How to Build a Newsletter in 30 Days") perform well in organic search because they match informational search intent precisely. Question titles ("Why Does Your Email Bounce Rate Keep Rising?") trigger curiosity and work especially well for social sharing. The "Ultimate Guide" and "Complete Handbook" patterns signal depth and attract backlinks. For SEO, place the primary keyword in the first 30 characters of the title and keep total length under 60 characters to avoid truncation in Google search results.

Who uses this tool

Content writers use it to generate headline options when they have a topic but are stuck on the angle, typically picking the most compelling option from a batch of 20+ and then personalising it. SEO specialists use it to generate title tag variations for existing posts they want to improve CTR on. YouTubers use it for video titles, since YouTube's algorithm also rewards high CTR and the same headline formulas apply. Marketing teams use it during content calendar planning to quickly headline-fill a list of planned posts before assigning them to writers.

Privacy and data handling

All title generation runs in your browser using local template engines — your topic, keyword, and niche information are never sent to any server or used to train any model.

Frequently asked questions

How do I use the blog title generator?
Enter your main topic or target keyword and an optional target niche or audience. Drag the slider to choose how many titles you want, then click Generate. Hover over any title to copy it individually, or use Copy All to grab the entire list.
Which title format works best for SEO?
How-to titles and listicles consistently earn high click-through rates. Titles with numbers (7 Ways, 10 Tips) signal specificity and get more clicks. For SEO, place your primary keyword near the beginning of the title and keep total length under 60 characters for Google to display it without truncation.
Can I use these titles directly?
Yes, but personalise them. The generator gives you a strong starting structure — adjust the specifics to match your content, add power words relevant to your niche, and fine-tune for your exact target audience.
What makes a great blog title?
The best blog titles are specific (not vague), promise a clear benefit or outcome, trigger curiosity or urgency, and include a primary keyword. Avoid generic titles like 'A Guide to X' — instead anchor it with a concrete promise: 'The Complete Guide to X That Cut My Time in Half'.
What is the ideal blog title length?
50–60 characters displays fully in Google search results without truncation. For social media sharing, 70–80 characters is acceptable. Headlines above 100 characters almost always get cut off in search previews.

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