Listing Readability Score Tool ({year}) – Free | Niceggie
Score the readability of your Amazon listing copy using Flesch-Kincaid and other metrics. Write clearer, more compelling product descriptions.
| Check Item | Result | Suggestion |
|---|---|---|
| Paste text to analyze automatically | ||
A high Amazon search ranking gets shoppers to your page, but your listing copy must convert them once they arrive. Long, passive, jargon-heavy sentences are the most common readability pitfalls in Amazon listings: a title with too many clauses, bullet points that run past 30 words, or descriptions loaded with vague superlatives all reduce the scanning speed and clarity that mobile shoppers depend on. The Listing Readability Score evaluates your text across five dimensions: average sentence length, presence of long sentences over 30 words, passive voice usage, weak filler words, and overused marketing cliches. Each dimension produces a result with a specific, actionable improvement suggestion. The composite score maps to a letter grade from A (excellent readability) to F (complex and hard to read), giving you an instant snapshot of overall copy quality. Use this tool iteratively: paste your draft, identify the most impactful issues, rewrite, and re-score until the grade reflects copy that is both keyword-optimized and genuinely engaging for human shoppers.
Why Readability Matters for Amazon Listing Conversion
Amazon listing conversion is driven primarily by how quickly and confidently a shopper can understand why your product solves their problem. On mobile devices, which account for the majority of Amazon browsing sessions, shoppers scan rather than read: they skim the title for the core product identity, then jump to the first bullet for the primary benefit, then check price and reviews. Dense, hard-to-parse sentences interrupt this scanning pattern and force cognitive effort that shoppers are unwilling to expend when alternatives are one back-button press away. Readability is therefore not just an aesthetic concern but a direct conversion driver. Amazon's own listing style guidelines recommend average sentence lengths under 20 words for bullet points, active voice constructions that lead with the benefit, and specific, measurable claims over vague marketing language. Listings that follow these principles tend to have higher add-to-cart rates, lower return rates from misunderstood products, and stronger review scores because customers received what they expected. The Readability Score tools these guidelines into quantifiable checks so you can measure, not just intuit, whether your copy meets the standard.
The Five Readability Checks and What They Measure
The analyzer runs five distinct checks on your pasted text. The first check is average sentence length: it counts the total word count and divides by the number of sentences, reporting the result in words. Sentences averaging under 20 words score well; 20 to 25 words is acceptable; over 25 words triggers a warning. The second check is long sentences: any individual sentence over 30 words is flagged because sentences of this length typically contain multiple ideas that should be split. The third check is passive voice detection: the analyzer scans for passive constructions such as is delivered, was shipped, and are included and reports how many passive phrases it finds. Active constructions like this product delivers or the material resists convert better because they communicate confidence. The fourth check is weak words: it scans for filler words such as very, really, just, basically, and quite that dilute the impact of surrounding strong verbs and nouns. The fifth check is overused marketing words: terms like best, amazing, high-quality, unique, and perfect appear so frequently in Amazon listings that they have lost meaning for shoppers and add no conversion value. Each check returns either a pass result or a count of violations with a specific suggestion for how to address it. The composite grade is calculated from the proportion of checks passed and the severity of any violations found.
Practical Rewriting Strategies for Better Readability Scores
Improving your readability score is a structured editing task, not a creative rewrite from scratch. Start with long sentence violations, which are the highest-impact issue. Find the flagged sentences and look for the conjunction or comma that joins two ideas: split there, making each idea its own sentence. This single change often moves the grade from C to B without touching any keyword content. Next, address passive voice. Passive constructions are easy to identify: if you can append by someone to the end of a phrase and it makes grammatical sense, the phrase is probably passive. Rewrite by moving the subject to the front: instead of the product is manufactured using premium materials, write premium materials give this product lasting durability. Next, scan the weak word list and replace very with a stronger adverb or adjective, remove just and basically entirely where they appear as hedges, and replace really with a specific qualifier. Finally, address the marketing cliches. For each flagged term like high-quality or amazing, substitute it with a specific, verifiable claim: instead of high-quality stainless steel, write 18/10 stainless steel, and instead of amazing durability, write tested to 50,000 open-close cycles. After each editing pass, re-paste your text and re-run the score. Three or four iterations typically move a listing from a D or C grade to an A or B, significantly improving the clarity and conversion potential of the copy without reducing keyword density.
How to Use the Listing Readability Score
- Paste your product listing text into the input field. You can paste the title, bullet points, and description together as a single block, or analyze individual fields separately to identify which section has the most readability issues.
- Review the composite readability score and letter grade displayed at the top of the results. The grade reflects the overall quality of your copy: A and B indicate copy that scans well for mobile shoppers; C and D indicate meaningful room for improvement; F indicates significant readability barriers.
- Examine the detailed checks table to see which of the five dimensions—average sentence length, long sentences, passive voice, weak words, and overused terms—are passing or failing. Each failing check shows a count of violations and a specific suggestion.
- Rewrite your copy based on the suggestions: split long sentences at conjunctions, convert passive phrases to active voice, remove filler words, and replace vague superlatives with specific claims. Focus on the highest-severity issues first, as these have the greatest impact on the grade.
- Re-paste the revised text to re-run the analysis and confirm the grade has improved. Repeat the edit-and-score cycle until the composite grade reaches A or B, then copy the final text to your Amazon listing fields.