Readability Scores
| Metric | Score | Interpretation |
|---|
FRE is “higher is easier”. Others approximate US grade level (higher = more complex).
Detail: Counts & Density
Longest Sentences & Frequent Words
Top 5 Longest Sentences (by words)
Top 20 Words (stopwords removed)
About Readability Scores
Readability formulas estimate how easy text is to understand by combining sentence length and word complexity. They’re used in education, journalism, UX writing, and health communication to match content to audience reading levels.
Each metric on this page uses a slightly different equation. Flesch Reading Ease and Flesch–Kincaid Grade Level are the most commonly referenced; Gunning Fog and SMOG emphasise polysyllabic words, while Coleman–Liau and ARI use character counts for a faster approximation.
Common Uses
- Assessing patient information leaflets and other public-facing health content.
- Checking plain-English standards and accessibility for websites and apps.
- Editing academic abstracts, policy summaries, and corporate communications.
- Benchmarking content quality across a blog, newsroom, or documentation set.
Example Comparison
Wordy Version
In light of the aforementioned considerations, the committee has provisionally determined that the implementation of additional procedural frameworks may be warranted to facilitate the optimisation of stakeholder alignment.
Clearer Version
Because of these points, the committee thinks we may need a few extra steps to help everyone work together better.
Live scores show how shorter sentences and simpler words improve readability.
Further Reading
FAQ
Why did a single sentence score as “hard/graduate-level”?
How many words can this analyse?
Does my text leave the browser?
Are syllable counts exact?
Do dashes, colons, and semicolons affect sentence splitting?
splitSentences).