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Blog Title Generator

Type a topic and instantly see it dropped into 15 common blog headline templates. It is a brainstorming starter, not an AI writer or an SEO scorer.

How to use this tool

  1. 1

    Type or paste your topic into the input box (for example, 'email marketing' or 'sourdough bread').

  2. 2

    As you type, 15 title variations appear automatically below, each with your topic substituted into a headline template.

  3. 3

    Click 'Copy' next to any title you like to copy it to your clipboard.

  4. 4

    Edit the copied title to fit your exact angle, audience, and tone before publishing.

How does this blog title generator actually work?

This tool is a string-template filler, not an AI model. It holds 15 fixed headline patterns built around formats that are common in blog writing: numbered listicles ('10 Things You Didn't Know About...'), how-to guides ('How to ... in 2025: Step-by-Step'), comparisons ('... vs Everyone Else'), definitive guides, and curiosity hooks ('The Hidden Truth About ...'). When you enter a topic, it does a literal find-and-replace of the placeholder {topic} in each template with the exact text you typed, then lists all 15 results. Because the substitution is literal, the tool does not adjust grammar, capitalization, or pluralization: if you type 'SEO tools', a template like 'Beginner's Guide to {topic}' becomes 'Beginner's Guide to SEO tools' verbatim, including whatever case you used. It does not score titles, count characters, check Google's roughly 60-character SERP truncation limit, analyze keywords, or measure click-through rates, despite some patterns being phrased as click-friendly. Treat the output as raw idea fuel that you refine by hand, not as finished, optimized headlines.

Common use cases

  • Beating writer's block when you have a topic but cannot think of an angle for the post.

  • Quickly generating a shortlist of working titles to A/B test in your email subject lines or social posts.

  • Brainstorming a content calendar by running several topics through the templates and saving the strongest hooks.

  • Giving a freelance writer or junior marketer a menu of headline formats to start from.

  • Comparing how the same topic reads as a listicle versus a how-to versus a comparison piece.

  • Sketching placeholder titles for an outline or pitch before you commit to final, polished wording.

Frequently asked questions

Does this tool use AI to write the titles?
No. It is a simple find-and-replace over 15 hard-coded templates. The same topic always produces the same 15 titles in the same order. There is no language model, randomization, or learning involved.
Should I publish the exact title it generates?
Use them as starting points, not finished headlines. The tool does not fix grammar, capitalization, or pluralization, so 'How to SEO tools' may read awkwardly. Edit each title to match your real angle and voice before publishing.
Will these titles rank better on Google?
The tool makes no SEO claims it can back up. It does not analyze keywords, search intent, or competition, and it does not check the ~60-character length where Google often truncates titles in results. Good rankings still depend on your content, keyword research, and on-page SEO.
Is my topic sent to a server or stored anywhere?
No. Everything runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript. Your topic text is never uploaded, logged, or saved. The 'Copy' button uses your browser's clipboard API locally.
Why do some titles say 2025 or sound clickbaity?
Those words are baked into the fixed templates (for example, 'How to {topic} in 2025'). The year will not auto-update, and curiosity-driven phrasing like 'The Hidden Truth About...' is part of the pattern, not a guarantee of performance. Rewrite the year or tone as needed.
Can I add my own templates or get more than 15 titles?
Not from this page. The 15 templates are fixed in the tool's code. If you need variety beyond these patterns, combine the output with your own ideas or use a dedicated AI writing tool for generative suggestions.
Why does my title have odd capitalization or a stray plural?
Because the substitution is literal: whatever you type is inserted exactly as-is. If you enter lowercase or a plural noun, the template keeps it that way. Type your topic in the form you want it to appear, then tidy the result manually.

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