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KX Toolkit

Keyword Grouper

Group a long keyword list by shared root words and topics.

Keyword Tools

Group a long keyword list by shared root words and topics.

This free Keyword Grouper 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 Keyword Grouper

  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 Keyword Grouper

  • 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 Keyword Grouper

  • 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 group keywords instead of writing one page per keyword?
Google treats closely related keywords as the same query, so writing separate thin pages for each variation triggers keyword cannibalisation and dilutes ranking power. Grouping reveals which keywords share intent and belong together on a single deep page, and which deserve their own article. A well-grouped 1,000-keyword list typically collapses into 50-150 content targets, each strong enough to rank for its entire cluster.
What is the difference between root-word grouping and intent grouping?
Root-word grouping clusters keywords sharing the same head term, like running shoes, best running shoes, and cheap running shoes. Intent grouping clusters keywords sharing the same goal regardless of wording, like top sneakers, best trainers, and quality athletic footwear. Intent grouping produces better content plans because it merges synonyms across different roots. Root grouping is faster and useful as a first pass before manual intent refinement.
How many keywords should sit in a single content group?
Five to thirty closely related keywords per group is the practical range. Fewer than five usually means the group is too narrow to justify a dedicated page; more than thirty often means the group mixes multiple intents that deserve splitting. Use the SERP overlap test: if the top ten results for two keywords share at least three URLs, they belong in the same group. If they share none, they need separate articles.
How do I name a keyword group for content planning?
Pick the highest-volume keyword in the group whose SERP intent matches your planned content format, and use it as the working title. This becomes the primary target. The remaining keywords in the group serve as secondary terms to weave through subheadings and body text. Naming groups by their primary keyword keeps the connection between research data and the eventual article clear, especially when handing briefs to writers.
Should I group across different funnel stages?
No. Awareness queries (what is, how does), consideration queries (best, vs, comparison), and decision queries (buy, price, near me) need separate content even when they share root words. Mixing them into one group produces an unfocused article that ranks for none. After grouping by root, split each group by intent stage to ensure every group maps to a single funnel position and a clear conversion path.
How does keyword grouping support topical authority?
Topical authority comes from covering a subject completely, not from a few high-volume hits. A grouped keyword map exposes the gaps in your coverage by showing every cluster within a topic. Build a content calendar that publishes one article per group, interlink them, and you create the topic cluster pattern Google rewards. Sites that work from grouped maps consistently outperform those targeting keywords one at a time.

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