A writing quality analyzer evaluates your text across multiple dimensions — clarity, conciseness, engagement, structure, vocabulary richness, and readability — with scoring weights that automatically adjust based on what you're writing (blog post, email, academic paper, or more).
Quality Profile
Top Improvements
Score by Dimension
How we score
How to Use the Writing Quality Analyzer
The Writing Quality Analyzer is context-aware: it doesn't apply a single universal standard to all writing. A clear, simple email is excellent by email standards but would score low as an academic paper. Select your content type first, and the analyzer weights each dimension appropriately.
Step 1: Select Your Content Type
Use the "What are you writing?" dropdown to select from Blog Post, Email, Academic Paper, Social Media, Creative Writing, or Business Report. This selection changes the weighting of each quality dimension. For emails, Clarity and Conciseness are weighted 40% combined. For academic papers, Vocabulary Richness and Readability together account for 40% of the score.
Step 2: Paste Your Text
Paste your draft text into the analyzer. Works best with at least 100 words for reliable dimension scores. Use the Sample button to see an example and understand the score format. Click "Analyze Quality" to run the analysis (real-time analysis is also available as you type).
Step 3: Review Your Top 5 Improvements
The "Top Improvements" panel ranks the 5 most impactful changes you can make, sorted by potential score gain. Each improvement states the specific issue and how much it's weighing down your overall score. Start with the #1 improvement first — it has the highest ROI on your revision time.
Step 4: Check Dimension Scores
Seven dimension scores each show a PASS, WARN, or FAIL rating with the specific metric that triggered the rating. Hover over a dimension to see context-type-specific guidance. Remember that weights differ: a FAIL on a low-weight dimension matters less than a WARN on a high-weight one.
Iterate Until Satisfied
Revise your text, paste the updated version, and watch the score improve. Effective writing is iterative — professional writers revise 3-5 times. Use the analyzer as a north star, but always trust your instinct for flow and voice. A score of 75+ across all dimensions generally indicates publication-ready quality for general audiences.
FAQ
Is this writing quality analyzer free to use?
Yes, the Writing Quality Analyzer is completely free with no usage limits. All analysis runs locally in your browser — your text is never sent to a server. No account required.
Is my text safe and private?
Yes, 100% private. Everything is processed locally in your browser. Your text never leaves your device.
What content types does the analyzer support?
The analyzer supports 6 content types: Blog Post, Email, Academic Paper, Social Media, Creative Writing, and Business Report. Each type uses different ideal ranges — an email should be clearer and shorter than a blog post, while academic writing is expected to use more complex vocabulary and longer sentences.
How does context-aware weighting work?
Each content type emphasizes different dimensions. Email weights Clarity and Conciseness most heavily because emails need to communicate quickly. Blog posts weight Engagement and Structure higher since readers can abandon easily. Academic papers weight Vocabulary Richness and Readability for a sophisticated audience. The overall score reflects what matters most for your chosen context.
How is the Flesch-Kincaid readability score used?
The target readability varies by content type: email targets grade 6-8 (very accessible), blog posts target grade 8-10 (general web audience), academic papers target grade 12-14 (college-level), and social media targets grade 5-7 (maximum accessibility). The analyzer awards full points when your readability falls in the ideal range for your content type.
What are power words and why do they matter for engagement?
Power words are emotionally charged terms that drive reader engagement — words like 'proven', 'essential', 'surprising', 'free', 'instantly'. Blog posts and sales copy benefit from 1-3 power words; using too many feels manipulative. Academic writing should avoid them. The analyzer rewards appropriate use for your content type.