Last updated February 2026
Tools/Word Frequency Counter
Free Tool

LinkedIn Word Frequency Counter

Paste any LinkedIn post. See your top 20 words, detect overuse, measure vocabulary richness, and replace repetitive words with stronger synonyms.

Top 20 words
Overuse detection
Vocabulary score
Synonym suggestions
1Paste your LinkedIn post
132 total words
2Post statistics
132Total wordsall words
56Unique wordsdistinct terms
76Meaningfulexcl. stop words
42%Vocab richnessRepetitive
3Top 20 words by frequency
great
10.5%×8
people
7.9%×6
content
5.3%×4
share
3.9%×3
think
2.6%×2
build
2.6%×2
good
2.6%×2
growing
1.3%×1
linkedin
1.3%×1
hard
1.3%×1
misunderstood
1.3%×1
helped
1.3%×1
hundreds
1.3%×1
personal
1.3%×1
brand
1.3%×1
secret
1.3%×1
isn't
1.3%×1
writing
1.3%×1
clarity
1.3%×1
here's
1.3%×1
Normal (<3%)
Watch (3–5%)
Overused (>5%)
4Overused words — pick a synonym
"great"10.5% — used 8×
"people"7.9% — used 6×
"content"5.3% — used 4×

No synonyms available for this word — consider rewording manually.

5Refined post
Most people think growing on LinkedIn is hard.

It's not. It's just misunderstood.

I've helped hundreds of people build their personal brand here.
The secret? Great content isn't about great writing.
It's about great clarity.

Here's what I know after 3 years of helping people grow:

1. People don't share good content. They share content that makes them look good.
2. The best posts aren't the most creative. They're the most specific.
3. Great engagement comes from great questions, not great answers.

Stop trying to be a great writer. Start being a great thinker.

Your people are waiting for your perspective, not your perfection.

Build in public. Share the messy middle.
People connect with the journey, not the highlight reel.

What's one thing you've learned that changed how you think about content?
All unique words (click to copy)

Why word frequency matters

Repetitive language is one of the most common — and most invisible — problems in LinkedIn content. Writers rarely notice when they use the same word five times in a post because they are focused on the idea, not the words.

But readers notice. When the same word appears repeatedly, it signals limited vocabulary, reduces credibility, and makes your content feel lazy. High-performing LinkedIn posts consistently use varied, precise language.

Vocabulary richness also affects perceived expertise. Research in linguistics shows that diverse word choice correlates with higher trust signals and deeper subject mastery in professional writing contexts.

This tool gives you an objective view of your language patterns before you publish — so you can fix invisible problems that would otherwise quietly hurt your engagement.

How to use it

Paste and analyze

Paste your full LinkedIn post draft. The analysis runs instantly — no button click needed.

Read the statistics

Check total words, unique words, and your vocabulary richness score. Aim for 65%+.

Scan the bar chart

Yellow bars are worth watching. Red bars are words you should almost certainly replace.

Pick better synonyms

For your top 3 overused words, click a synonym from the suggestions panel.

Copy the refined post

The refined post auto-updates with your synonym choices applied. Copy and paste it into LinkedIn.

Iterate until clean

Run again after edits. A clean post has no red bars and a richness score above 65%.

Frequently asked questions