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Random Headline Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A random headline generator gives writers, designers, and marketers an instant supply of realistic placeholder copy — no blank-page paralysis required. Strong headlines follow recognizable patterns, and this tool produces how-to, listicle, question, and bold-claim formats so your placeholder text reflects the actual rhythm of real-world copy. Mockups reviewed with Lorem Ipsum get vague feedback; mockups reviewed with plausible headlines get actionable feedback. Set the count anywhere you need and pick a format or leave it on mixed. Ten bold-claim headlines stress-tests a hero section at full width. A mixed batch of twenty populates a content calendar template with genuine editorial variety. Run as many batches as you like — output is instant.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Set the Number of Headlines to match how many placeholder lines your mockup or brainstorm session needs.
  2. Choose a Headline Format — select a specific style like 'how-to' or 'listicle' to get consistent structure, or leave it on 'mixed' for variety.
  3. Click Generate and scan the output list for headlines that fit your length, tone, and context.
  4. Copy individual headlines directly into your design tool, document, or content calendar.
  5. Re-generate as many times as needed — each batch produces a fresh set with no repetition penalty.

Use Cases

  • Populating a Figma landing page mockup with plausible hero and section headlines before copywriting begins
  • Stress-testing font size and line wrapping in a design system by generating headlines of varying lengths
  • Filling a Notion content calendar template with listicle, how-to, and question headlines to show editorial rhythm to stakeholders
  • Generating bold-claim and question-format placeholders for Facebook Ads Manager mockups before writing final ad copy
  • Sparking real article ideas by treating a generated headline as a writing prompt during an editorial brainstorm

Tips

  • Lock the format to 'listicle' when testing blog index page layouts — numbered headlines reveal wrapping issues that shorter headlines hide.
  • Generate a batch of 20 in 'mixed' mode and sort them by character count to quickly find short, medium, and long variants for responsive breakpoint testing.
  • Use bold-claim headlines as writing prompts: take the generated structure, replace each generic word with a specific term from your product, and you often have usable copy in under a minute.
  • For client presentations, pair generated headlines with matching subheadings written by hand — the contrast shows clients how structure and support copy work together.
  • Question-format headlines work best above a value proposition section; avoid using them in hero banners where confident, declarative copy converts better.
  • If a generated headline feels almost right, note its word count and structure before editing — preserving the original pattern often keeps the momentum that made it feel compelling.

FAQ

what headline formats does this generator actually produce

The tool covers four high-performing structures: how-to, numbered listicle, question, and bold declarative claim. Choosing 'mixed' distributes all four across a single batch, which is ideal when populating a multi-section layout or a content calendar that needs editorial variety in one pass.

can I use the generated headlines as real copy on my site

Many outputs work as first drafts with light editing — swap the generic noun or timeframe for something specific to your product and audience. A headline like 'How to Double Your Results in 30 Days' becomes publishable the moment you replace the vague parts with concrete details relevant to your offer.

how is locking a specific format different from using mixed mode

Locking a format constrains every headline in the batch to that exact structure — all listicles start with a number, all how-tos open with that phrase — which is useful when testing a single ad unit or template section at consistent syntactic weight. Mixed mode is better when you need variety across a full layout review.