Syllable Counter — Instantly Count Syllables in Any Word, Line, or Poem
A free online syllable counter that instantly counts syllables in any word, sentence, or poem — per-word breakdown and line-by-line counts update as you type, no account required.
How This Syllable Counter Tool Works
This tool pairs a rule-based algorithm with a syllable dictionary. English spelling and pronunciation don't always match — a polysyllable like comfortable compresses in natural speech, poem splits differently than its letters suggest. Combining both methods returns a more accurate count than either achieves alone, covering standard English vocabulary reliably.
Paste a word, sentence, or full paragraph and the counter returns:
- The total number of syllables across your text
- A per-word syllable breakdown, shown inline
- Word count, character count, and line count for longer input
The per-line display is a key feature for structured poetry, where checking syllables while writing keeps each line on track — the syllable count per line is structural, not optional.
Syllable Counting for Poetry and Language Learning
Poetry and Rhyme
Whether you're writing a haiku (5–7–5), a tanka (5–7–5–7–7), or a sonnet (ten syllables per line), this free syllable counter helps you count the syllables on each line faster and more precisely than by hand. Poets working in lyric forms and structured verse rely on syllable rhythm and flow — one word carrying too many syllables in a phrase throws the meter off entirely.
Language Learning and Readability
A language learner building English vocabulary can count syllables for any word in seconds. Understanding syllable structure in complex words and phrases improves both pronunciation and grammar instinct. Syllable data is also the backbone of readability formulas like Flesch-Kincaid — useful for teachers producing accessible study materials and content writers checking text before publishing.
Syllable Count Accuracy
For standard language use, this dictionary-backed counter returns consistent, dependable results for any word, sentence, or passage — simple and free, with no limits.
For formal academic or publishing work, cross-checking a phonetic reference is sensible. No online tool is entirely accurate across every dialect, loanword, or proper noun. For poetry, learning, rhyme, and everyday writing, the output is reliable enough to use directly without an extra step.