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KX Toolkit

Keyword In Page Checker

At minimum: title tag (toward the start), H1, first 100 words of body, URL slug, meta description, and one image alt attribute. Including it in an H2 reinforces topical relevance. The checker validates all these spots at once. Avoid forcing the keyword if it sounds awkward; seman

Keyword Tools

At minimum: title tag (toward the start), H1, first 100 words of body, URL slug, meta description, and one image alt attribute. Including it in an H2 reinforces topical relevance. The checker validates all these spots at once. Avoid forcing the keyword if it sounds awkward; seman

This free Keyword In Page Checker 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 In Page Checker

  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 In Page Checker

  • 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 In Page Checker

  • 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.

Where should my target keyword appear on a page?
At minimum: title tag (toward the start), H1, first 100 words of body, URL slug, meta description, and one image alt attribute. Including it in an H2 reinforces topical relevance. The checker validates all these spots at once. Avoid forcing the keyword if it sounds awkward; semantic variations work nearly as well thanks to BERT and MUM. Coverage in key on-page elements signals to Google that the page is genuinely about the keyword.
How important is the keyword in the URL?
Moderately important. URLs with the target keyword get a small ranking lift and improve user trust (clearer link previews on social, better bookmarking). However, changing established URLs to add keywords usually loses more than it gains because of redirect equity loss and broken backlinks. For new pages, include the primary keyword in a clean short slug. For existing pages, leave the URL alone unless paired with a major content overhaul.
Does the keyword need to appear exactly, or do variations count?
Both work. Google's language models understand that running shoes, runners shoes, and shoes for running are related. Exact-match presence in title and H1 is still slightly favored, but body content benefits more from natural variation than rigid repetition. The checker flags exact match in critical spots (title, H1, meta) and recognizes that body content should mix exact, plural, and semantic variants for natural readability and broader query coverage.
What if my target keyword is not in any image alt text?
Add it to one or two relevant images, but not every image. Alt text exists primarily for accessibility and image search. Stuffing the keyword into every alt looks manipulative and degrades screen reader experience. The natural pattern: name the image content accurately, including the keyword when it genuinely describes the visual. Image search traffic from well-aligned alt text can deliver surprising volume on visual-heavy queries like recipes, fashion, and home decor.
Is keyword density still measured by tools and Google?
Tools still report it, but Google does not use a density threshold. Density above 4-5% looks unnatural and risks stuffing flags. Density of 0% means the keyword is missing entirely. The healthy range is 0.5-2%, but emphasis matters more: keyword in title and H1 outweighs raw body density. Modern SEO is about coverage and intent, not hitting a target percentage. Use density only as a sanity check against accidental over-repetition.
Should I optimize one page for multiple keywords?
Yes, but around a single primary intent. A well-optimized page typically targets one primary keyword, two or three closely related secondary keywords, and dozens of long-tail variants that emerge naturally from comprehensive content. Optimizing one page for unrelated keywords (running shoes and basketball shoes) splits intent and ranks for nothing. The keyword checker should pass for the primary term; secondary keywords benefit from natural mention without dedicated optimization slots.

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