8 free keyword research tools for SEO (that beat their paid alternatives)
Do you really need to pay a fortune to find the best SEO & PPC keywords for your business?
If you Google for a list of SEO tools, you’ll see there are almost 200 options on the market now.
All of them differ in features, amounts and sources of data, and, definitely, prices. But which of them do you really need? And, most importantly, do you have to fork out hundreds of dollars a month, or is there a way to cut the costs?
Today we’ll explore 8 of the best free keyword research tools. Each of them best fits a specific keyword research task and does the job no worse than their paid alternatives.
1. Rank Tracker
To find the most ample list of keyword variations and analyze their SEO profitability.
When to use:
Your best SEO keywords are often not very obvious. To find real keyword gems, you need to dig out all the possible variations from multiple data sources. That’s the essence of keyword research.
And this is where Rank Tracker comes in especially handy with 23 different keyword research tools inside it:
- Suggestions from Google, Bing, Yahoo, and Amazon;
- Google Ads Keyword Planner and Google Search Console integration;
- Database of all SEO keywords your competitors rank for;
- Long-tail keyword and question generator;
- Popular misspellings and permutations;
- And more.
Using the tools one by one, you get the most ample list of keyword ideas. More to that, you can analyze the keyword difficulty and traffic potential of each keyword you get. This lets you focus the SEO efforts on what takes the least effort to bring in the most traffic.
Free version:
Even though the tool has a more feature-rich paid version, the 100%-free version is absolutely enough for keyword research. It lets you use all the research tools and analyze the keywords’ traffic potential.
2. Google Search Console
To discover “low-hanging fruit” traffic growth opportunities for your current keywords.
When to use:
Google Search Console is the place to analyze your current SEO keywords with their average Google positions, impressions and CTRs.
Looking through this research data is a great way to find unexpected SEO shortcuts. For example, if your URL currently ranks on page two or three, Google already considers it pretty relevant for the keyword. And the URL might need just a little SEO boost to storm onto page one and start bringing you a lot more traffic.
Or you might notice that some of your page-one ranking keywords underperform in terms of clicks (have low CTRs). A little tweaking of their SERP snippets or adding the Schema markup could work wonders here.
Free version:
Google Search Console is a free keyword research tool.
3. Google Ads Keyword Planner
To decide which keywords to target with SEO and PPC.
When to use:
For some keywords, low ad bids make it reasonable to simply purchase keyword clicks with PPC. For others, overly expensive clicks mean you need to win over the traffic with SEO.
So, before starting out any search engine marketing campaign, you need to split your keyword list between SEO and PPC targeting. And the best place to look for the needed data is, obviously, Google Ads Keyword Planner.
The tool shows you keyword suggestions, search volumes, cost-per-click data, advertiser competition and seasonal traffic fluctuations, all in one place. And it even lets you estimate the prospective PPC spends in your niche.
Free version:
Google Keyword Planner is a free keyword research tool. However, keep in mind that unless you are already spending enough money in Google Ads campaigns, your search volume analysis is limited to ranges (rather than exact search volumes). And you might need another tool (like Rank Tracker) for more precise search volume analytics.
4. AnswerThePublic
To find keyword suggestions through popular questions for featured answers and voice search optimization.
When to use:
With Google’s ability to better understand natural language, searchers got used to phrasing their queries as questions rather than separate words. The rise of voice search also helped this trend along.
Making your content to answer the exact questions is one of the key aspects of your keyword research success. Plus, question-based content has a bigger chance of squeezing into Google’s featured answers or the so-called “position 0” results.
The quickest and easiest way to find popular questions related to your business niche is AnswerThePublic – a no-brainer keyword tool that combines your main keywords with various question words (like who, what, why, etc.).
Along with questions, you will also get a handful of keyword ideas through “preposition” keywords (when your seed keyword is combined with another keyword via a preposition) and “comparisons” (like “your keyword vs another keyword”).
Free version:
AnswerThePublic is a free keyword generator.
5. Keyword Tool Dominator
Perfect keyword research tool for Amazon, Etsy and Ebay.