Content tool

Content Clarity Checker

Analyze a block of text and see where clarity drops, where structure gets messy, and what to fix first.

This free checker reviews sentence length, vague wording, filler, structure, and passive voice hints so you can make the text easier to read quickly.

Paste the content below. The checker updates automatically while you type, with a short delay to keep the input stable.

19 words1 sentences1 paragraphsLive analysis

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Score

80/ 100

Strong

The text is fairly clear and easy to scan, with only light cleanup needed.

What this checker looks for

Long sentences, vague wording, filler words, unclear structure, passive voice hints, and anything else that makes the text harder to read quickly.

What's wrong

  • The text uses vague wording like "various", "things", which weakens precision.
  • The text uses filler words like "actually", which adds noise.
  • One sentence sounds passive, which can hide the action and weaken directness.

How to improve

  • Replace vague wording with concrete nouns, named examples, or specific details.
  • Cut filler words and move the main point closer to the front.
  • Rewrite passive sentences so the subject and action are clearer.

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Why content clarity matters

Clear content is easier to understand, easier to trust, and easier to act on. When the reader has to slow down to decode the message, attention drops fast.

Strong clarity also helps your content feel more confident. The same idea can perform better when it is written in a direct, structured, and specific way.

Common clarity issues in content

  • Long sentences that force the reader to work too hard.
  • Vague phrases that make the meaning feel fuzzy or generic.
  • Filler words that add noise without adding value.
  • Dense structure that hides the main point.
  • Passive wording that makes the action feel less direct.

How this content clarity checker works

This checker uses simple client-side heuristics to review sentence length, vague wording, filler, structure, and passive voice hints.

It then returns a score, points out the main problems, and suggests how to rewrite the text so it is easier to read and easier to use.

FAQ

What makes content unclear?

Content often becomes unclear when sentences are too long, words are vague, structure is dense, or the main point is buried too late.

Does passive voice always hurt clarity?

Not always, but passive voice can make writing feel less direct and harder to scan when it shows up too often.

How can I improve content clarity?

Use shorter sentences, cut filler words, replace vague phrases with concrete details, and separate ideas into simpler chunks.

What kind of content should I check?

You can check landing page copy, short articles, email copy, social captions, and any block of text that needs to read faster.

Explore next

After checking clarity, compare the headline version and keep exploring the content toolkit.

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If this helped you, it'll probably help someone else too.

Open the composer to edit the post, then choose a network or copy the link.

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