Free Text Tools - Format, Compare, Count Without Upload
Text tools are deceptively sensitive. The text you paste into a counter or a diff tool often includes drafts of emails, internal notes, contract clauses, code snippets with credentials, or personal information. Server-based text tools log every paste. Browser-based tools process the text on your device with no upload, so even sensitive copy stays local.
Indian use cases are everyday: counting words for a college essay, exam answer, blog draft, or social media post; comparing two versions of a rental agreement, offer letter, or vendor contract; auditing a CV before submission. Our text tools work entirely in the browser, are fast on long documents, and do not store anything between sessions.
When to use each tool
- Word counter: hitting an exact word limit for college applications, exam answers, blog posts, scholarship essays (most NSP forms have hard limits), magazine submissions, or LinkedIn About sections
- Text diff: comparing two versions of a contract, an updated offer letter, a code snippet, or two drafts of the same article to spot changes line-by-line
- Reading time estimates: sizing a blog post or newsletter before sending it
- Keyword density checks: auditing on-page SEO for a draft post without pasting it into a third-party tool
Common limits to plan for
- UPSC essay paper: 1000 to 1200 words per essay, two essays in three hours
- SOP for foreign university applications: typically 800 to 1000 words
- Twitter / X post: 280 characters; threads stitched in 280-char units
- LinkedIn About section: 2000 characters, posts: 3000 characters
- Most college admission essays in India: 250 to 500 words
- NSP scholarship statement of purpose: typically capped at 300 to 500 words