Writing
Headline Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A headline generator helps writers and marketers stop staring at a blank title field and start choosing from formulas proven to drive clicks. Headlines are the first — and sometimes only — thing a reader evaluates. This tool generates headlines for blog posts, articles, and landing pages by combining your topic with a chosen format: How-To, List, Question, Power Statement, or a mixed rotation of all four. Enter a topic like "productivity tips," set the count to five or more, and get a ready shortlist in seconds. Content teams use it to batch title options before drafting. Solo writers use it to find one strong angle quickly. Either way, you leave with specific options to edit, test, and publish.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Type your topic or target keyword into the Topic field — be specific, e.g. 'intermittent fasting for beginners' not just 'diet'.
- Select a Headline Format from the dropdown: Mixed gives variety, or pick a specific type like How-To or Numbered List to match your content style.
- Set the Number of Headlines to at least 8 to give yourself enough options to compare meaningfully.
- Click Generate and scan the results for headlines that are specific, promise a clear benefit, and feel natural to read aloud.
- Copy your top two candidates, edit them to include your exact target keyword, and verify the final version is under 60 characters if it will be used as an SEO title tag.
Use Cases
- •A/B testing two headline variants on a paid landing page in Google Optimize
- •Batch-generating list-format titles for a month of scheduled blog posts
- •Finding a question-format headline that targets a Google featured snippet
- •Refreshing the H1 of an underperforming article to lift organic click-through rate
- •Drafting five YouTube video title options before choosing the strongest for publishing
Tips
- →Use the Mixed format first to see which formula type naturally produces the strongest result for your topic, then switch to that format for a focused second run.
- →Pair a numbered headline with an odd number — readers perceive odd-numbered lists as more credible and less arbitrary than round numbers like 10 or 20.
- →If every generated headline feels generic, your topic input is too broad — narrow 'marketing' to 'email marketing for e-commerce stores' and the output becomes far more usable.
- →Save rejected headlines in a separate doc; a headline that doesn't fit one article often works perfectly for a different piece on the same topic.
- →For email subject lines, take a headline from the Question format and remove the question mark — declarative subject lines often outperform questions in open-rate tests.
- →Run the same topic through both the How-To and Power Statement formats and compare tone — How-To works better for tutorial content, Power Statements for opinion or persuasion pieces.
FAQ
which headline format gets the highest click-through rate
Numbered list headlines consistently outperform in blog and social contexts because they set a clear expectation upfront. How-to headlines rank second for organic search, while question headlines drive shares on social media. Test formats against each other using your platform's A/B tools to see what your specific audience responds to.
how long should a headline be for SEO and social media
Keep headlines under 60 characters so they render fully in Google search results without truncation. For LinkedIn and X (Twitter), 60–80 characters tends to perform best. Front-load the specific number or promise so readers who see a truncated preview still get the hook.
can I use generated headlines directly or do they need editing
Treat them as strong starting points, not finished copy. Insert your exact target keyword in the first half, cut any vague language, and verify the headline accurately reflects your content — Google may rewrite title tags it considers misleading. Generating five or more variants lets you shortlist the two strongest for testing.