Enter a seed keyword and get hundreds of real long-tail keyword suggestions scraped from Google, broken down by questions, alphabet (a-z), and prepositions. Perfect for content planning, SEO, and finding low-competition opportunities.
Keyword research is the single highest-leverage activity in SEO, and it starts with one question: what do people actually type into Google when they're looking for what you offer? This tool answers that. Give it a seed keyword and it generates hundreds of real long-tail keyword suggestions by querying Google's autocomplete across four angles — base suggestions, question modifiers, every letter of the alphabet, and common prepositions — so you get a complete picture of the search landscape, not just the obvious 20 ideas every competitor is already targeting.
These are the raw autocomplete results for your seed keyword. Treat them as the "core" intent clusters — the highest-volume phrases people already associate with your topic. If you are starting a new content cluster, pick 2–3 of these as your pillar pages.
Keywords prefixed with "how", "what", "why", "can", "is" — these are informational queries with strong featured-snippet potential. They are gold for top-of-funnel blog content and FAQ pages. Answer them in 40–60 word paragraphs right under an H2 that restates the question verbatim.
Your seed + every letter of the alphabet appended. This is how you discover unexpected long-tails you would never have brainstormed yourself — "running shoes on sale", "running shoes review", "running shoes zero drop". Low competition, high conversion intent.
"for", "with", "without", "vs", "near", "in" modifiers. The "vs" set is especially valuable for comparison content, and "near" / "in" reveal local-SEO opportunities. If you see "[your seed] near me" here, that is a signal to build location pages.
Every suggestion is pulled live from Google Autocomplete — the same system that powers the dropdown when you type in the Google search box. This means every suggestion in the list is something real people are actually searching for. There is no database of "estimated" keywords involved.
Yes. The country (gl) and language (hl) dropdowns on this page control which Google regional autocomplete is queried. Set country to "India" and language to "Hindi" to see what Indian searchers type; set country to "Germany" to see German autocomplete. This matters because Google's autocomplete is region-specific.
Anywhere from 50 to 400+ depending on how popular the seed is. Common seeds like "running shoes" tend to return 300+; very niche seeds might return 50–80. The tool queries 8 question modifiers, 26 alphabet letters, and 8 prepositions, so the theoretical ceiling is roughly 420 unique suggestions.
Google Autocomplete filters commercial and sensitive queries. If you know people search for a specific phrase but it is not in the list, Google has suppressed it from autocomplete — which usually means the space is either very competitive (Google shows ads instead) or Google considers the query sensitive (medical, political, financial).
Look at the Questions bucket first — informational queries convert best for top-of-funnel content. Then run your top 5 candidates through our SERP Checker tool to see who ranks for them. If the top 10 is dominated by big sites, pick longer, more specific variations from the Alphabet or Prepositions buckets where competition is lower.
There is no catch and no payment method required. Anonymous users get a few runs per day, and a free account (just an email and password) unlocks 50 runs per day. We never ask for a credit card, because the only cost to us is a tiny number of Google autocomplete queries, which are free.
Yes. After running a query, click the "Download as .txt" button to save all suggestions as a plain text file you can import into Excel, Google Sheets, Ahrefs, Semrush, or any SEO tool you use for further filtering and volume estimation.
No. Search volume requires paid APIs (Ahrefs, Semrush, or Google Keyword Planner with a running ad campaign). This tool gives you the one thing paid tools cannot: every real long-tail phrase people currently type. Pair it with Google Keyword Planner or Ubersuggest's free tier if you need volume numbers for the shortlist.
Hand-picked internal pages and external references from sources Google itself considers authoritative on this topic.