Business
Product Tagline Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A product tagline generator saves you the blank-page grind when a product launch is days away and you still need a line that lands. Enter your product name and its single strongest benefit, choose how many taglines you want, and get a batch of short, punchy options built across proven structures: outcome-first, command-style, problem-solution, and conversational. Each run gives you variety to compare, not just one guess to live with. Marketers use it to stress-test angles before committing to ad spend. Founders use it to nail the hero line on a landing page or Product Hunt listing. The output is a creative starting point — one word swap or clause flip often takes a good line to a great one.
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Type your product or service name into the Product field, exactly as you want it to appear.
- Enter the single clearest customer benefit in the Key Benefit field, using outcome language rather than feature language.
- Set the count to at least six so you get variety across different tagline structures in one batch.
- Click Generate and scan the list for lines that match your brand tone, noting two or three candidates.
- Copy your favourites and test small word-level edits to improve rhythm before using them in live copy.
Use Cases
- •Writing the hero headline for a SaaS landing page before a Product Hunt launch
- •Testing three tagline angles against each other in Google Ads A/B experiments
- •Filling the 30-character subtitle field in an Apple App Store listing
- •Crafting the cover-slide one-liner on a seed-round investor pitch deck
- •Refreshing brand copy on a Shopify storefront after a product pivot or rebrand
Tips
- →Run the generator twice with different benefit inputs for the same product to compare emotional versus functional angles side by side.
- →If your product name is long or unusual, try a shortened version or a category label to see if the taglines read more cleanly.
- →Benefit words ending in '-ing' (syncing, automating, tracking) tend to produce more active, verb-driven taglines than noun-based benefits.
- →Paste your top three candidates into your headline and read them at the font size they will appear: brevity problems show up faster visually than on a list.
- →Avoid entering two benefits at once; split them into separate runs and compare outputs, since combined inputs often produce diluted, unfocused lines.
- →For ad copy, favour taglines that contain a number or a time reference, as they tend to lift click-through rates compared to abstract benefit statements.
FAQ
how many words should a product tagline be
Three to eight words is the proven sweet spot. Lines that stay under eight words fit more placements — banner ads, business cards, app store subtitles — and are far easier to remember. If yours runs past ten, it's probably describing a feature rather than promising an outcome; cut to the result.
what's the difference between a tagline and a slogan
A tagline is tied to a specific product and the promise it makes to buyers — it lives on the product page, the packaging, and the pitch deck. A slogan represents a broader campaign or company philosophy and rotates more often. Nike's 'Just Do It' is a slogan; 'The lightest trail shoe we've ever built' is a tagline.
how do I pick the right benefit to enter in the generator
Use the outcome your happiest customers mention when they recommend you — check reviews, NPS comments, or support tickets for the exact words real users reach for. Avoid vague inputs like 'easy' or 'fast' on their own; pair them with a result ('fast enough to deploy before lunch') and the taglines you get back will be sharper.