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KX Toolkit

Google Trends URL Builder

Build Google Trends comparison URLs for up to five keywords.

Keyword Tools

Build Google Trends comparison URLs for up to five keywords.

This free Google Trends URL Builder from KX Toolkit is part of our all-in-one online toolkit. It runs entirely in your browser, so your data never leaves your device for client-side operations. 100% free, forever - no paywall, no credit card, no trial.

How to use the Google Trends URL Builder

  1. Enter your seed keyword or phrase.
  2. Pick the country or language if the tool supports targeting.
  3. Click the action button to run the search.
  4. Export the results to CSV, or copy them into your spreadsheet.

What you can do with the Google Trends URL Builder

  • Find low-competition long-tail keywords for new content.
  • Audit a page for keyword density and over-optimisation.
  • Build content briefs around real search queries.
  • Plan PPC campaigns with realistic search-volume data.

Why use KX Toolkit's Google Trends URL Builder

  • Browser-based: Works on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS and Android - no install, no extension.
  • Privacy-first: Client-side tools never upload your data; server-side tools delete files right after processing.
  • Mobile-friendly: Full feature parity on phones and tablets - not a stripped-down view.
  • Fast: Optimised for instant feedback. No artificial waiting screens, no email-gated downloads.
  • One hub for everything: 300+ tools across SEO, text, image, PDF, code, color, calculators and more - skip switching between sites.

Tips for the best results

Combine 2-3 different keyword tools - autocomplete, density and competition - for a complete picture before publishing.

Related Keyword Tools

If you find this tool useful, explore the full Keyword Tools collection or browse our complete tool directory. KX Toolkit is built for marketers, developers, designers, students and anyone who needs a quick utility without signing up for yet another SaaS.

Why use Google Trends for keyword research?
Google Trends shows relative interest over time, revealing seasonality, rising topics, and declining queries that volume estimates from third-party tools miss. While other tools show average monthly volume, Trends shows the trajectory: is interest doubling, halving, or steady. For evergreen content, you want stable or rising trends; for timely content, you want sharp recent spikes. Building decisions from trajectory data reduces the risk of investing in topics already past their peak.
How many keywords can I compare on Google Trends?
Up to five at once. This limit forces prioritisation, which is usually a good thing. Compare your primary target against four close alternatives or competitors to see which has stronger and more sustained interest. Save the comparison URL for later reference. If you need to compare more than five, run multiple comparisons sharing one common anchor keyword and align them by that shared baseline for relative scoring.
What time range should I select for trend analysis?
Use 5 years for evergreen topic decisions, 12 months for seasonal planning, and 90 days for trending topic detection. Shorter windows show noise; longer windows hide recent shifts. Always view at least two ranges before drawing conclusions: a long-range chart confirms whether a 90-day spike is a real trend or just a normal seasonal peak. The combination tells you whether to invest in evergreen depth or rapid timely content.
How do I interpret regional interest data from Trends?
The regional map shows where searches are concentrated relative to total search volume in that location, not absolute search count. A small country can score 100 if the keyword is locally popular even with low total volume. Use regional data to spot unexpected markets or to confirm geographic targeting decisions. Combine with population-weighted thinking to avoid over-investing in a market that scores high relatively but represents a tiny absolute audience.
Can Google Trends predict keyword search volume?
Not directly. Trends shows relative interest on a 0-100 scale, not absolute search counts. To estimate volume, anchor your keyword against a term whose volume you already know from other tools, then scale by the relative Trends score. This rough calibration is good enough for prioritisation decisions but not for forecasting. Treat Trends as a directional signal that complements absolute volume data, not a replacement for it.
How do I spot rising topics before they become competitive?
Set the time range to 12 months and look for keywords whose interest line is sloping clearly upward, especially with no obvious seasonal pattern. The Related Queries panel highlights breakout terms with sudden surges. These early-trend keywords often have low SEO competition because most publishers wait for tools to confirm volume before acting. Publishing comprehensive content on a rising trend three to six months early is one of the cheapest ways to dominate a SERP.

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