Readability checker online tools analyze your writing and return a score that indicates how easy it is to understand. This free, browser-based tool uses the Flesch-Kincaid formula to evaluate sentence length and word complexity, giving you an objective measure of reading difficulty. No signup required. Use it to ensure blog posts, documentation, and educational content reach their intended audience.
The Readability Score tool analyzes text using multiple established readability formulas and shows scores that indicate how easy or difficult the text is to read. Supported formulas include the Flesch Reading Ease score, the Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level, the Gunning Fog Index, the Coleman-Liau Index, the SMOG Grade, and the Automated Readability Index. Each formula uses a different combination of sentence length and word length (syllable count or character count) to estimate reading difficulty. The results are shown alongside their interpretation: a Flesch Reading Ease of 70-80 means "fairly easy", equivalent to a 6th-7th grade level. This tool is used by content writers, SEO professionals, educators, legal document writers, and UX writers who need to ensure their content is appropriate for their target audience.
Different readability formulas were designed for different purposes and have different strengths. The Flesch Reading Ease (0 to 100 scale, higher is easier) was developed for US Navy training materials and is widely used for general prose. The Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level converts the same calculation to a US school grade equivalent. The Gunning Fog Index estimates the years of formal education needed to understand the text on first reading. The Coleman-Liau Index uses character count instead of syllable count (easier to compute programmatically). The SMOG Grade (Simple Measure of Gobbledygook) was designed for assessing healthcare materials and is preferred for medical content. For web content, the general recommendation is to aim for a Flesch Reading Ease between 60 and 70 (roughly 8th-9th grade), which reaches the broadest possible audience. Email marketing and landing page copy benefits from even simpler language (70-80). Legal and medical documents historically score very low (high difficulty) because they use technical terminology and long sentences, and improving them to a reasonable readability level typically requires restructuring rather than just replacing individual words. The Hemingway Editor is a popular tool that gives similar readability analysis alongside specific suggestions for improvement. For SEO, Google has not confirmed that readability directly affects rankings, but readable content correlates with lower bounce rates and higher dwell time, both of which are positive engagement signals.