# Free AI Keyword Research Tool Share your topic, niche, or business and get 20 to 30 keyword ideas grouped by theme and search intent, with long-tail and question keywords called out. AI-suggested ideas, not live volume data, so run the winners through a volume tool before you build. No signup, no card. A free AI keyword research tool turns a seed topic, a business description, or a niche into 20 to 30 keyword ideas organized by theme and search intent in seconds, without creating an account. You tell Eva what your business is or what you want to rank for, and she hands you a grouped keyword set across the themes that matter for your niche: each keyword labeled by intent (informational, commercial, transactional, navigational), with long-tail and question keywords called out so you can see the high-competition head terms alongside the faster-win long-tail targets. She explains the two or three standout picks and why they are worth prioritizing, then responds to any refinement you ask for: more long-tail, buyer-intent only, for a specific city, focused on one service, or add questions people actually Google. She is honest about the limit: these are AI-suggested keyword ideas based on language patterns, not live search-volume or difficulty data from a search engine, so run the ones that look promising through a volume tool before building content around them. There is no signup and no credit card to start, and when exploring keywords one topic at a time gets old, the same SEO strategist can become a full AI employee that runs ongoing keyword research and content planning for your business for real. ## Keyword ideas organized by theme and intent, not just a flat list Most keyword tools hand you a flat list sorted by volume, which tells you how competitive a keyword is but not how it fits into the way searchers think about your topic. Theme grouping shows you the audience segments: the people who want to learn, the people who are comparing options, the people who are ready to buy, and the people looking for a specific brand. That landscape is what a content strategy is built on. Every keyword idea here is labeled by intent. Informational keywords belong on explainer pages and blog posts. Commercial keywords belong on comparison and review pages. Transactional keywords belong on product, service, and pricing pages. Navigational keywords belong on brand pages. Putting the wrong type of page behind a keyword is one of the most common reasons well-optimized content does not rank. ## Long-tail and question keywords are where early wins live Head terms like 'keyword research' or 'invoicing software' are searched often but dominated by sites with years of domain authority and thousands of backlinks. Ranking for them from a standing start is a years-long project. Long-tail keywords, 'free keyword research tool for Shopify stores', 'invoicing software for freelancers in the UK', are more specific, closer to a decision, and face competition you can actually beat. Question keywords are a content map all by themselves. Every 'how do I', 'what is', 'why does', 'which is better' phrase is a searcher with a specific need. Answer it directly and you show up in People Also Ask boxes, featured snippets, and voice results. They are almost always informational and convert well when the content genuinely answers the question rather than burying the answer in filler. ## Honest about what AI keyword ideas are and are not These keyword suggestions come from an AI trained on a large body of text, not from a live search engine API. That means they reflect real language patterns about how people talk and search in a niche, not actual monthly search volume or current keyword difficulty scores. They are a strong starting point for seeing the landscape and finding angles you might have missed, but they are not a substitute for volume data. The right workflow is: generate ideas here to map the space, spot the themes and intent types, identify the long-tail and question angles worth pursuing, then validate the promising ones in Google Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest, Ahrefs, or Semrush before writing a word of content. Treat the AI list as the ideation phase and the volume tool as the qualification phase. ## How it compares to other keyword research tools Paid keyword tools like Ahrefs and Semrush give you live volume, difficulty scores, and competitor data, and they are worth it once you are building a serious content operation. But they require a subscription and a learning curve, and the thing they are weakest at is ideation: showing you the themes and angles you have not thought of yet from a blank page. This tool does the ideation phase for free in seconds, without a signup. It groups the ideas by theme and intent, calls out the long-tail and question keywords, and explains which ones look most promising and why. Then you take the shortlist to a volume tool. Unlike a one-off list, it also talks back, so when you want more long-tail, a local focus, or buyer-intent only, you get exactly that. And when you are ready to turn keyword research into a real content plan someone executes for you, the same SEO strategist can stay on. ## From keyword ideas to a content plan your business actually executes Finding keywords is the easy part. Deciding which ones to target, writing the content, keeping it fresh, tracking what is ranking, and adding new pages as the business changes is the work that actually drives organic traffic, and the part most site owners quietly never finish. Here the SEO strategist who mapped your keyword landscape can stay on. Once you sign up, the same person becomes a full AI employee in your workspace, running keyword research on demand, building content briefs around the targets that matter, and helping you execute on the content plan rather than just producing another list to sit in a spreadsheet. ## Why keyword research shapes everything downstream - **Intent first** search intent, what the searcher actually wants, determines whether your page matches what Google shows, no matter how well you optimize it, so every keyword idea here is labeled by intent: informational, commercial, transactional, or navigational - **Long-tail wins** long-tail and question keywords are more specific, closer to a decision, and face far less competition than head terms, making them the fastest path to rankings for a site without years of domain authority - **$0** to generate as many keyword ideas as you want, with no signup and no credit card - **Seconds** from a one-line topic or business description to a grouped set of 20 to 30 keyword ideas organized by theme and intent ## How the ways to find keywords compare | Option | No signup | Output quality | Cost | Speed | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Guessing from memory | n/a | Misses most of the landscape | Free | Instant | | Paid tools (Ahrefs, Semrush) | Rarely | Excellent, with live data | Expensive | Fast | | Google Keyword Planner alone | Needs Google Ads account | Volume data, limited ideation | Free | Moderate | | This free AI keyword tool | Yes | Grouped by theme and intent, long-tail and questions called out | Free | Seconds | ## The short version - A free AI keyword research tool turns a seed topic or business description into 20 to 30 keyword ideas grouped by theme and labeled by search intent, with no account and no card to start. - These are AI-suggested keyword ideas based on language patterns, not live search-volume or difficulty numbers from a search engine. They give you the landscape fast, but validate the promising ones in a volume tool before building content around them. - Long-tail and question keywords are called out explicitly because they are where early wins live: more specific, closer to a decision, and far less competitive than the head terms every established site is already targeting. - When exploring keyword ideas one topic at a time gets old, the same SEO strategist can become a full AI employee that runs ongoing keyword research and content planning for your business for real. ## Questions people ask about keyword research **How do I do keyword research for my website?** Start with the topic or niche your site covers and think about how your audience searches at each stage: learning (informational), comparing options (commercial), and ready to act (transactional). Generate a broad set of ideas, group them by theme, then validate the ones that look promising in a volume tool to check actual search demand and competition. This free keyword research tool does the ideation and grouping step for you in seconds: describe your site or niche and get 20 to 30 keyword ideas organized by theme and intent. **Is this keyword research tool free?** Yes. You can generate as many keyword ideas as you want with no signup and no credit card. Because the ideas come from an AI SEO strategist rather than a fixed template, you can keep steering: more long-tail, buyer-intent only, add a city, focus on a sub-niche. After a number of messages it may ask for your email to save your keyword lists and keep going. **What is search intent, and why does it matter for keywords?** Search intent is what the person actually wants when they type a query. Informational: they want to learn. Commercial: they are researching before a decision. Transactional: they are ready to buy or sign up. Navigational: they want a specific site. Intent determines what kind of page Google shows for a query. If your page is a blog post targeting a transactional keyword, it competes with product and pricing pages and rarely wins, no matter how well it is optimized. Every keyword idea here is labeled by intent so you match the right page type to the right keyword from the start. **What are long-tail keywords, and why should I target them?** Long-tail keywords are longer, more specific phrases that get fewer searches than head terms but face less competition and convert better because the searcher is further along in their thinking. 'Keyword research tool' is a head term, dominated by Ahrefs, Semrush, and Moz. 'Free keyword research tool for e-commerce blogs' is long-tail, specific, and something a smaller site can realistically rank for. For a site without years of domain authority, long-tail keywords are where early rankings and traffic wins live. Every reply here calls them out explicitly. **What are question keywords, and how do I find them?** Question keywords are phrases that start with how, what, why, when, which, can, does, or is. They show up in featured snippets, People Also Ask boxes, and voice results, and they map directly to content: each question is a potential article, FAQ entry, or explainer section. They are almost always informational and convert well when you answer them directly. Describe your topic here and ask for question keywords specifically and you get a set focused on what people actually type when they are trying to learn. **Do these keyword ideas come with search volume?** No, and it is important to be clear about that. These are AI-suggested keyword ideas based on language patterns, not live data from a search engine API. They reflect how people talk and search in a niche, but they do not come with monthly volume or keyword difficulty scores. Use them for ideation and landscape mapping, then run the promising ones through Google Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest, Ahrefs, or Semrush to validate demand before you build content around them. **How many keyword ideas do I get?** By default 20 to 30, grouped into two to four theme clusters with intent labels and long-tail or question tags called out. After the list, two or three standout picks are highlighted with a short explanation of why they are worth prioritizing. From there you steer: more long-tail, a specific intent, a sub-niche, or a completely different angle. **Can it find keywords for a local business?** Yes. Tell it you run a local business and name your city, region, or service area, and the keyword ideas include local modifiers: city-specific transactional terms, 'near me' variants, and neighborhood or region angle. Local keywords are often the highest-converting terms for service businesses because they catch people ready to hire, and they face far less competition than national head terms. Describe your business and location and the local keyword set comes back in the first reply. **Can it run keyword research against my competitor's site?** Not in this free chat, where it suggests ideas from the topic and niche you describe rather than from crawling live sites. Competitor gap analysis, showing which keywords a rival ranks for that you do not, requires a paid tool like Ahrefs or Semrush that can pull actual ranking data. Describe your niche here and you get the landscape of ideas; for competitor-specific gaps, take the list to a paid tool or sign up to work with a full AI employee who can research the space more deeply. ## FAQ **Is it really free?** Yes. You can generate keyword ideas right now with no signup and no credit card. After a number of messages we may ask for your email to save your lists and keep going. **Do I need to sign up?** No. Just describe your topic or business and get keyword ideas immediately. Email is optional and only used to save your lists and unlock more messages. **Does it show search volume?** No. These are AI-suggested keyword ideas, not live search data. They give you the landscape fast, but validate the ones that look promising in Google Keyword Planner, Ubersuggest, Ahrefs, or Semrush before building content around them. **How many keywords do I get?** 20 to 30 per reply, grouped by theme and labeled by intent, with long-tail and question keywords called out. From there you steer the refinements: more long-tail, buyer-intent only, a sub-niche, or a local focus. **What is search intent and why does it matter?** Search intent is what the searcher actually wants: to learn (informational), to compare (commercial), to act (transactional), or to find a specific site (navigational). Targeting the wrong intent means your page competes with pages built for a different job and rarely wins. Every keyword here is labeled so you match the right page type from the start. **Can I ask for long-tail keywords specifically?** Yes. Ask for 'more long-tail', 'question keywords only', or 'buyer-intent keywords' and the next set focuses there. Long-tail and question keywords are called out in every reply by default, but you can get a full set built around them. **Does it work for local businesses?** Yes. Tell it your business type and city or service area and the keyword ideas include local modifiers: city-specific transactional terms, 'near me' variants, and neighborhood or region angles. These are often the highest-converting terms for service businesses. **Can it research what my competitors rank for?** Not in this free chat, where it suggests ideas from the topic you describe rather than from live ranking data. For competitor gap analysis you need a paid tool like Ahrefs or Semrush. Describe your niche here to map the landscape, then take the list to a volume tool to validate. **What language can I use?** Any. Eva generates keyword ideas in whatever language you write in, and can tailor them to a specific market or locale if you ask. **Does it remember the keywords it suggested?** Within a session it builds on what you have already seen and does not repeat the same keywords. To save your lists across visits, add your email. If you sign up to keep going, the conversation comes with you into your workspace. **Can I use it for multiple topics in one session?** Yes. Get a keyword set for one topic, then describe another and start fresh. You can map several niches or pages in a single sitting. For ongoing keyword research across an entire site or content plan, the same SEO strategist can take it over once you sign up. **What if I want ongoing keyword research done for me?** When exploring keywords one topic at a time is not enough, you do not have to do it alone. You can hire a team of AI employees to run keyword research, build content briefs, and execute on the content plan across your whole site and start for free.