AI Overview Previewer
Preview how your content appears inside Google's AI Overview answer boxes before publishing
Capture "Position Zero" with AI-Ready Content
Refine your definitions for Google AI Overviews by monitoring word count, complexity, and keyword placement.
How to Use
- Enter your target keyword in the field below.
- Paste or draft your definition (aim for 40-60 words).
- Monitor the real-time preview and readability metrics.
- Use the Draft Assistant or Auto-Simplify buttons to refine.
Pro Tips
- Keep definitions under 60 words for best AI Overview fit.
- Use your keyword naturally in the first sentence.
- Write at a Grade 8 reading level or below.
- Avoid complex jargon — simpler text gets cited more.
AEO Checklist
- Definition between 40 and 60 words.
- Keyword appears in the first sentence.
- Grade level reads 6–8 (no complex-word flags).
- Opens with a direct definitional statement, not a hedge.
Suggestion…
AI Overview
Your preview will appear here…
Words–
Sentences–
Grade Level–
AEO Rank–
Snippet Length Goal (40-60 words)
Drafting…
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this exactly how Google AI Overview renders content?
No. Google AI Overview's answer box has a proprietary layout that varies by query, device, and vertical. This tool approximates the constraints (40–60 word ideal length, complexity scoring, keyword placement) so you can draft content likely to fit when it's selected as a citation.
Why is 40–60 words the target?
Analysis of Google AI Overview answer boxes across queries shows citations typically fall in the 35–80 word range, with 40–60 hitting most cleanly. Under 30 words tends to feel incomplete; over 80 gets truncated or re-summarized — risking paraphrase rather than direct citation.
What reading grade should I target?
Grade 6–8 (Flesch-Kincaid). AI Overview favors passages any reader can parse without domain knowledge. If the same concept is expressed at Grade 6 by one source and Grade 14 by another, the Grade 6 version is far more likely to be extracted.
Does my target keyword need to appear first?
Strongly recommended. The tool checks whether the keyword appears in the first sentence — both because that's the pattern AI Overview citations follow, and because it forces a definitional opening structure ("X is Y") rather than a hedged framing ("In many cases, X can be…").
Does Auto-Simplify use AI?
No — it's deterministic. It swaps high-syllable words for common alternatives using a built-in lexicon. Use it to quickly drop reading grade, then hand-edit for voice and precision afterward.
MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU