Edit Counter: Track Word Changes During Editing

When you edit your writing, do you know whether you made it tighter or longer? An edit counter is a simple tool that compares the word count of your original draft against your revised version. It shows you exactly how many words you added or removed — so you can stay in control of your word count.

What Is an Edit Counter?

An edit counter is a comparison tool. You paste your original text in one box and your edited version in another. The tool instantly calculates the word count of both and shows the difference. If your edit added words, you see a positive number. If you trimmed words, the number is negative.

Original: 500 words → Edited: 420 words → Difference: -80 words (16% shorter)

Why Track Word Changes?

Knowing how your word count shifts during editing helps you in several ways:

How to Use the Edit Counter

Using the Edit Counter tool takes just seconds:

  1. Paste your original draft into the first text box.
  2. Paste your edited version into the second text box.
  3. Read the results: Original words, edited words, difference, and percentage change update in real time.

Green means you added words. Red means you cut words. Gray means no change.

Real-World Example

Imagine you are editing a blog post:

With an edit counter, you can track every round and make sure the final version lands where you want it.

Try Our Free Edit Counter

Compare original and edited word counts instantly. No signup required.

Use Edit Counter →

FAQ

Q: Does this work for character counts too?
A: This tool focuses on word counts. For detailed character stats, try our Word Counter.

Q: Can I compare more than two versions?
A: The tool compares two versions at a time. To compare multiple rounds, save each pair separately.

Q: Is my text stored or saved?
A: No. Everything runs in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server or stored anywhere.

Related Guides

👉 Word Counter Guide
👉 Complete Guide & Instructions
👉 Capitalize Text Tool