Getting word count, character count, lines, paragraphs, sentences, and reading time usually means opening several tools. The Text Statistics tool gives you a single dashboard: paste your text and see all of these stats at once—no sign-up and no data sent to a server.
What does Text Statistics show?
Text Statistics is a free online tool that provides a single view of word count, character count (with/without spaces), lines, paragraphs, sentences, and estimated reading time. It is used to get a quick overview of document length, readability, and structure without using separate word and character counters. All processing happens in your browser.
Key Features
- One dashboard — Words, characters (with/without spaces), lines, paragraphs, sentences, and estimated reading time in one place.
- Reading time — Typically using an average reading speed (e.g. 200 words per minute). It is an estimate, not exact.
- Any input — Paste or type any text. No size limit for in-browser processing.
- Instant result — Paste and see all stats update. Copy or screenshot when ready.
- Privacy-first — All processing happens in your browser. Your text is never sent to any server.
- No account — Use as often as you need without sign-up.
How to Use Text Statistics
- Open the Text Statistics tool.
- Paste or type your text into the input area.
- View the dashboard: words, characters (with/without spaces), lines, paragraphs, sentences, reading time. Use the "Use tool" button on the docs page if you are reading this from the documentation.
Real Use Cases
- Quick overview of length — See word count, character count, and line count in one glance. No switching between tools.
- Readability and structure — Paragraph and sentence counts help assess structure. Reading time helps set expectations for readers.
- Editorial workflow — Check length and reading time before publishing. Meet guidelines (e.g. max words, target reading time).
- Academic and essays — Verify word count and structure in one place. Estimate reading time for assignments.
- Content planning — Gauge length and reading time for drafts. Compare with targets or competitor content.
- SEO and meta — Use character counts for meta descriptions and titles; word count for content length.
Why Use Text Statistics Instead of Alternatives?
- vs. Separate counters — Word Counter and Character Counter give one metric each. This tool gives words, characters, lines, paragraphs, sentences, and reading time together.
- vs. Word frequency only — Word Frequency Counter shows word distribution. This tool shows aggregate stats and structure.
- vs. In-editor stats — Not all editors show paragraphs, sentences, and reading time. This tool does, in one place.
Stats can differ from another tool because different tools use different rules for words, sentences, and paragraphs (e.g. hyphenation, abbreviations). Our tool uses simple whitespace and punctuation rules.
Benefits for Writers, Editors, and Students
- Writers — One place for length and reading time. No mental math.
- Editors — Quick check of structure and length before handoff.
- Students — Verify word count and get reading time for essays or reports.
Common Mistakes
- Stats differ from another tool — Different tools use different rules for words, sentences, and paragraphs (e.g. hyphenation, abbreviations). Our tool uses simple whitespace and punctuation rules.
- Reading time exact — Reading time is an estimate (e.g. 200 wpm). Actual time varies by reader and content.
- Expecting frequency — This tool is aggregate stats. For word or phrase frequency use Word Frequency Counter or Find Phrase Frequency.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does text statistics show?
A single view of word count, character count (with/without spaces), lines, paragraphs, sentences, and estimated reading time.
What stats are shown?
Words, characters (with/without spaces), lines, paragraphs, sentences, and estimated reading time.
How is reading time calculated?
Typically using an average reading speed (e.g. 200 words per minute). It is an estimate, not exact.
Is my text stored?
No. All processing happens in your browser. Your text is never sent to any server.
When should I use text statistics?
Use it to get a quick overview of document length, readability, and structure without using separate word and character counters.
Different tools use different rules for words, sentences, and paragraphs (e.g. hyphenation, abbreviations). Our tool uses simple whitespace and punctuation rules.
Text Statistics gives you one dashboard for length and structure: paste, view, copy or screenshot. No account, no server round-trip. For word count only use the Word Counter, for character count the Character Counter, and for word distribution the Word Frequency Counter.
Use the Text Statistics tool to see full text stats.