Keyword Cluster Tool
Paste a list of keywords. Get them clustered into topic groups with intent labels.
A long keyword list is useless until it's organized. Targeting fifty individual keywords with fifty thin pages is the old, penalized way to do SEO. The modern approach is topic clusters: group related keywords so one strong page (or a small hub of pages) can rank for many searches at once. This tool takes a raw keyword dump and sorts it into topic groups with intent labels, so you can plan content instead of guessing.
How to use it
- Paste your Keywords (one per line) — export them from Google Search Console, your keyword research tool, or autocomplete suggestions. More is better; 30–200 keywords give the clusters real shape.
- Generate. The tool groups keywords by shared topic and labels the search intent behind each group — informational, commercial, transactional, or navigational.
- Read the clusters as a content map. Each tight cluster is usually one page; a broad cluster may become a pillar page with supporting articles.
- Match intent to format: informational clusters become guides and how-tos, commercial clusters become comparison or "best of" pages, transactional clusters become product or service pages.
When to use it
- Planning a content calendar — turn a keyword spreadsheet into a prioritized list of pages to write.
- Building topical authority — clusters show you which subtopics you need to cover to own a subject.
- Auditing existing content — spot keywords you have no page for, or several pages fighting over the same cluster (keyword cannibalization).
- Structuring a new site — clusters map naturally to your categories and internal linking.
Tips for better results
- Feed it real keywords with search demand, not made-up phrases. Clusters are only as useful as the inputs.
- Watch the intent labels closely — a single page should serve one dominant intent. Mixing "what is X" and "buy X" on one page confuses both Google and the reader.
- Use the clusters to plan internal links: the pillar page links down to cluster pages, and they link back up.
- Re-run it as your keyword list grows so your content map stays current.
Common mistakes to avoid
Don't create a separate page for every keyword in a cluster — that's how you cannibalize your own rankings. Don't ignore the intent label and write a blog post for a transactional keyword. And don't cluster once and forget it; search behavior shifts, so revisit quarterly.
Once you have your clusters, turn each topic into headlines with the Blog Title Generator and write matching titles and descriptions using the SEO Meta Generator. To round out a page targeting an informational cluster, the FAQ Generator helps you capture the long-tail questions inside that topic.
Frequently asked questions
How many keywords should I paste in at once?⌄
Anywhere from 30 to a few hundred works well. A larger list gives the tool more to work with and produces clearer, more useful topic groups.
What do the intent labels mean?⌄
They describe why someone searches a keyword — informational (learning), commercial (comparing), transactional (ready to buy), or navigational (looking for a specific site). Matching content format to intent is what makes pages rank.
Why should I cluster keywords instead of targeting them one by one?⌄
One strong page can rank for an entire cluster of related searches. Clustering prevents thin content and keyword cannibalization, where several of your own pages compete for the same term.
Where can I get keywords to paste in?⌄
Export them from Google Search Console, a keyword research tool, or Google autocomplete and "People also ask" suggestions. Real keywords with actual search demand give the best clusters.
Is the tool free and are my keywords stored?⌄
Yes, it's free to use, and the keyword list you paste is processed only to create your clusters — it isn't saved or shared.