Free with an account · 8-15 ideas tagged with intent
Free Blog Post Ideas Generator
Describe your niche — get 8-15 working headlines, each with search intent, a primary keyword, an honest difficulty hint, and a one-line angle.
See how it works — click any example
Works on
Any niche
Target audiences
Product areas
Content categories
Seasonal angles
Non-English blogs
Styles
Evergreen, trending, how-to, comparison, opinion, data-driven, case study,
listicle, news. Filter by intent: informational,
commercial, navigational, or
transactional. Mixed (recommended) balances across your calendar.
You get
8-15 headlines, each with search intent, primary keyword + 2-5-term cluster,
difficulty hint (easy / medium / hard), estimated word count, and the
angle-that-makes-it-different-from-other-200-articles. Feed picks into the
Blog Post Writer or refine via
Title Generator.
Won't work on
Niches under 8 characters.Pure SEO keyword dumps — use Keyword Research instead.Real-time search volume — we hint difficulty, not scrape Ahrefs.YMYL topics without credentials — we flag them.
Pricing
Free with an account — 30/month.
Upgrade to Pro for 1,500/month.
Each run costs 2 credits.
Here's what a real run looks like.
Niche: "Newsletter on indie SaaS growth for solo founders at $0-30K MRR" · Format: mixed · Count: 12
HOW-TOINFORMATIONALEASY1,800 words
Pick your landing-page headline in 20 minutes: a 4-question script for founders who hate copywriting
Primary: landing page headline formula ·Cluster: saas landing page copy, landing page hero headline, headline tester saas, value proposition examples
Most headline advice is vague ("make it clear!"). This is a specific 4-question script you can run in 20 minutes, with real examples from the newsletter's archive.
COMPARECOMMERCIALMEDIUM2,400 words
Plausible vs Fathom vs Umami for indie SaaS analytics: the one I actually ship with in 2026
Primary: plausible vs fathom ·Cluster: privacy-first analytics saas, google analytics alternative, umami vs plausible, self-hosted analytics indie
Every "X vs Y" post is sponsored. This one is from someone who ran all three for 6 months on the same app, with screenshots from the actual dashboards and a final pick.
CASE STUDYINFORMATIONALEASY2,000 words
How we tripled free-trial signups by removing 4 form fields (with before/after screenshots)
Primary: saas signup form optimization ·Cluster: free trial signup conversion, remove form fields, saas onboarding reduction, signup friction
First-hand case study with actual conversion numbers and the 4 specific fields removed. Screenshots + the analytics before/after. Near-zero competition for this exact angle.
OPINIONINFORMATIONALMEDIUM1,200 words
Stop using "Enterprise" on your $19/mo SaaS pricing page. Call it what it is.
Hot-take on a pattern every indie SaaS copies from B2B giants. Strong opinion, backed by a specific audit across 30 indie pricing pages. Good linkbait for the solo-founder audience.
+ 8 more ideas in the same run · 2-4 content gaps · cautions where relevant (YMYL topics, over-saturated angles)
You can, and it will give you 10 generic ideas — half informational, all the same difficulty, zero sense of intent or keyword strategy. This tool is narrower: every idea comes with the search intent it targets, a primary keyword + cluster, an honest difficulty hint, and a one-sentence angle that explains what makes the post different. You can pick the 3 that match your funnel stage and ship this week.
Search intent is what a user is actually trying to do when they type the query. Informational = learning ("how does X work"). Commercial = researching before buying ("best X", "X vs Y"). Navigational = looking for a specific page ("X pricing", "X login"). Transactional = ready to act ("buy X", "X coupon"). Mixing intents across your editorial calendar covers different funnel stages — informational posts earn top-of-funnel traffic, commercial posts earn higher-converting traffic.
It's a heuristic: we look at how competitive the primary keyword is likely to be in your niche, whether the format requires first-hand authority (case studies and opinions are harder to fake), and whether the topic is crowded with high-DA competitors. "Easy" ideas are specific, lower-volume queries where a new blog can realistically rank. "Hard" ideas are pillar content that takes months to rank but is defensible once it does. It's a planning aid — verify the exact keyword difficulty in Ahrefs / Semrush / Keywords Everywhere before committing.
Will the keyword clusters have real search volume?#
We surface likely-related phrases based on semantic coherence, but we don't have real-time search volume data. Treat the cluster as a starting point: paste it into your SEO tool of choice to see actual volume and difficulty. The cluster's job is to give you a *starting set* of queries that are topically adjacent to the primary keyword — useful for outlining H2s and internal links.
Describe your niche in any language (Japanese, Spanish, Chinese, French, German, etc.) — we produce the headlines and keywords IN THAT LANGUAGE. The rationales come back in English, but the ideas themselves are ready to use for a non-English blog. Helpful for bloggers targeting markets outside the English-speaking world.
Yes. If you pick "How-to" we'll give you ~70% how-tos with 30% adjacent formats that complement the topic (like a guide or a listicle). "Mixed" is recommended because a calendar of only how-tos gets repetitive — but if you're planning a Q1 sprint on tutorials, bias accordingly. The format per idea is always labeled, so you can filter visually.
Angles competitors aren't covering well — usually sub-topics where existing articles are shallow, outdated, or missing a key perspective. Each gap is a post waiting to be written. The model returns 2-4 per run, specific to your niche — not generic "people want more video content" advice.
Pick an idea → pipe the headline into Title Generator for 6-12 refined variants → run the primary keyword + cluster through Essay Outline Generator to get a structural scaffold → write the draft → run it through Humanizer if it reads AI → finish with Meta Description Generator for the SERP listing. The whole loop is one click between each tool.
YMYL ("your money or your life") topics — health, finance, legal, safety — have stricter E-E-A-T (experience, expertise, authority, trust) requirements from Google. If your niche touches these, the "cautions" field will flag formats or ideas to skip unless you have credentials. We'll never recommend a post like "how to cure X illness" to a non-medical blogger.
First 3 runs per day are free without signup. Free account gets 30 credits/month; each run costs 2 credits. Pro plans have 1,500/month — enough to refresh your editorial calendar constantly.