Showing page 0 of 0
| Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| # | Keyword | Keyword Length | Word Count |
A long tail keyword generator turns a single seed keyword into hundreds of specific, multi-word search phrases pulled from real autocomplete data across Google, YouTube, Bing, Amazon, and eBay. ToolsPivot's version runs entirely in your browser with no account required, no daily limits, and multi-provider support that most free alternatives don't offer.
About 70% of all search queries contain three or more words. These longer phrases carry less competition and attract visitors who already know what they want. The challenge is finding them. Manually typing variations into a search bar takes hours. A long tail keyword tool solves that by pulling suggestions from search engine autocomplete data, showing you what real people type. Bloggers, SEO professionals, PPC advertisers, and e-commerce store owners depend on this research to find ranking opportunities that broader keyword research tools overlook. Once you've found your keywords, check your content length with a word counter to match the depth your target phrases demand.
Enter your seed keywords: Type one or more base keywords into the Seed List field. The counter at the top tracks how many seeds you've added.
Pick your search provider: Select Google, YouTube, Bing, Amazon, or eBay from the Provider dropdown. Each platform returns different suggestions based on its user base.
Set your country and language: Choose from 50+ countries and multiple languages so the results match your target audience's search behavior.
Select modifier types: Enable prepositions (for, with, near), questions (how, what, why), alphabets (a through z), or numbers to expand your seed into long tail variations.
Choose prefix or suffix placement: Decide if modifiers appear before your keyword ("best running shoes") or after it ("running shoes for flat feet"). You can also use a preset from the Load Configuration menu to skip manual setup.
Hit START and export: Click START to generate results. ToolsPivot displays each keyword in a paginated table showing keyword length and word count. When you're done, click Export as CSV to download everything.
Five autocomplete providers: Pull suggestions from Google, YouTube, Bing, Amazon, and eBay in a single session. Most free tools only support Google. Amazon and eBay suggestions reveal buyer-intent phrases that traditional keyword tools miss.
Country and language targeting: Filter results by 50+ countries and multiple languages. A searcher in the UK types different phrases than someone in Australia, even in English. This setting captures those differences.
Four modifier categories: Expand your seed using prepositions (for, with, near, without), question words (how, what, where, why, when), alphabetical suffixes (a through z), and number modifiers. Each category generates a distinct set of long tail phrases.
Prefix and suffix control: Place modifiers before or after your seed keyword. "Best protein powder" (prefix) targets a different search intent than "protein powder for weight loss" (suffix). You control which direction the tool expands.
Preset configurations: Load Configuration offers ready-made setups like "Alpha only - Suffix," "Numbers only - Prefix," and "All Possible Combinations." These presets save time when you want a specific expansion type without toggling every option.
CSV export: Download your full keyword list as a CSV file. Import it directly into Google Sheets, Excel, Ahrefs, SEMrush, or your keyword clustering workflow. You can also use these keywords to generate optimized meta tags for each target page.
Bulk seed processing: Enter multiple seed keywords at once. The tool processes each independently, building a combined list from all seeds in a single run.
Real-time progress tracking: Two counters at the top show your seed count and total discovered keywords as the tool runs. You can stop at any point and keep everything found so far.
No sign-up, no paywall: Run as many keyword searches as you want without creating an account. KeywordTool.io limits free users to partial results and hides volume data behind a subscription. ToolsPivot shows every generated keyword without restrictions.
Multi-platform keyword discovery: Pull from five different autocomplete databases in one tool. YouTube autocomplete reveals video content opportunities. Amazon autocomplete surfaces product-focused phrases. Running the same seed across all five providers gives you a wider spread of long tail ideas than any single-source tool.
Precise geographic targeting: Country-level filtering keeps your keyword list relevant to the market you're targeting. A plumber in Dallas and a plumber in London need completely different keyword sets.
Full control over expansion logic: Most competitors generate keywords using a fixed algorithm. ToolsPivot lets you choose exactly which modifier types and placement to apply. Want only question-based long tails? Enable questions only. Need every alphabetical combination? Select "All Possible Combinations." That flexibility means less noise in your results.
Pairs with your existing SEO stack: Export to CSV and import into whatever tool you already use. Check keyword density after writing your content, track your keyword rankings over time, or estimate ad costs with the keyword CPC calculator.
Works on any device: The tool runs entirely in your browser. No software downloads, no plugins, no Java or Flash dependencies. It works on desktop, tablet, and mobile.
This is a feature most people skip over, but it changes the kind of keywords you find.
A prefix modifier places words before your seed keyword. If your seed is "laptop stand," prefix modifiers generate phrases like "best laptop stand," "cheap laptop stand," "adjustable laptop stand." These tend to capture comparison and shopping intent.
A suffix modifier places words after your seed. The same "laptop stand" seed produces "laptop stand for bed," "laptop stand with fan," "laptop stand under $30." Suffix phrases signal specific needs. The searcher already knows the product category and is narrowing down by feature or constraint.
For content marketing, suffix modifiers usually produce better blog post topics because they point to a specific problem. For e-commerce and product pages, prefix modifiers help you identify how shoppers describe what they're looking for. Run both directions on the same seed and compare. You'll spot patterns that tell you what your audience cares about most.
A food blogger enters "meal prep" as a seed with question modifiers enabled. The tool returns phrases like "how to meal prep for a week," "what containers for meal prep," and "can you meal prep salads." Each result is a ready-made blog post title. Pair these with a questions explorer search to map out a quarter's content in one sitting.
An online shoe retailer runs "running shoes" through the Amazon provider with suffix prepositions. The output includes "running shoes for plantar fasciitis," "running shoes for wide feet," and "running shoes for concrete." These are buyer-intent phrases with clear purchase signals. Adding them to product descriptions can drive traffic that converts at 3 to 5% instead of the 1 to 2% typical of broad keywords.
Google Ads campaigns targeting "project management software" might cost $15 to $25 per click on broad match. Switching to long tail variations like "project management software for construction teams" drops CPC significantly while maintaining lead quality. Export the keyword list and upload it directly into Google Ads as exact match keywords.
Agencies need to produce keyword research fast across multiple industries. Enter each client's core terms as seeds, run the tool with "All Possible Combinations," and export the CSV. Cross-reference results with a full website SEO check to identify which opportunities the client's site is best positioned to capture.
Switch the provider to YouTube and enter your channel's topic. YouTube autocomplete reflects what viewers search for on the platform, which differs from Google. A tech reviewer entering "iPhone" might discover "iPhone camera tips for beginners" as a high-opportunity video title.
Yes, 100% free with no usage limits. You don't need an account, email, or installation. Every feature including CSV export, multi-provider support, and all modifier types is available at no cost.
It sends your seed keyword to the selected search engine's autocomplete API with different letter and number combinations appended. The returned suggestions are real phrases people type into that search engine, sourced from actual search behavior rather than AI-generated guesses.
Short tail keywords contain one to two words ("running shoes") with high search volume and intense competition. Long tail keywords use three or more words ("best running shoes for flat feet") with lower volume but higher conversion rates. About 70% of all search queries fall into the long tail category.
Yes. Select YouTube as your provider and the tool pulls autocomplete suggestions from YouTube's search bar instead of Google's. YouTube users search differently than Google users, so the keyword lists you get will be unique to the platform. Use these phrases in video titles, descriptions, and tags. You can also extract tags from competing videos with the YouTube tag extractor.
That depends on your seed keyword and modifier settings. A single seed with "All Possible Combinations" can produce hundreds of suggestions. Multiple seeds with all modifiers active generate thousands. There's no cap.
Load Configuration applies a preset combination of modifier types and placement options. For example, "Alpha only - Suffix" appends every letter a through z after your seed keyword. "All Possible Combinations - Prefix" runs every modifier type before your seed. These presets save time compared to selecting each option manually.
No. ToolsPivot's long tail keyword generator focuses on keyword discovery, not metrics. For search volume and competition analysis, export your CSV and import it into Google Keyword Planner, Ahrefs, or SEMrush. You can also pair results with a backlink checker to gauge ranking difficulty for specific phrases.
For discovery, yes. Google Keyword Planner groups similar keywords and hides many long tail phrases because they have low volume. This tool pulls directly from autocomplete, which surfaces the exact multi-word phrases searchers actually type. Use both together: ToolsPivot for discovery, Keyword Planner for volume validation.
Yes. Select your target country from the dropdown and the autocomplete suggestions will reflect search patterns specific to that region. A "coffee shop" search in the US returns different long tail suggestions than the same search targeted at India or Australia.
Start with alphabetical suffixes for the widest spread of ideas. This appends each letter a through z to your seed and captures the most popular completions for every starting letter. After reviewing those results, run question modifiers separately to find "how to," "what is," and "why" phrases that work well as page titles and FAQ content.
Place your primary long tail keyword in the page title, the first paragraph, one H2 heading, and the meta description. Sprinkle related variations naturally through the body text. Don't force exact-match phrases where they sound awkward. Search engines understand synonyms, so natural writing beats keyword stuffing. Run your draft through a readability checker to keep it easy to read.
Yes. Select Amazon as your provider and the suggestions come from Amazon's internal search autocomplete. These phrases reflect what shoppers type when looking for products, which makes them ideal for Amazon listing optimization, product title writing, and backend keyword fields.
Enter your service type as the seed (like "dentist" or "plumber"), set the country to your market, and enable preposition modifiers. You'll get location-aware long tail phrases like "dentist near downtown" or "plumber for old houses." Combine these with your city name for strong local search signals.
Copyright © 2018-2026 by ToolsPivot.com All Rights Reserved.
