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Free

Topic Generator

Generate useful topics for writing, class, content, and conversation

5 credits per use

Tool Access see who can use this tool

GuestAvailable
5 credits
Flash
FreeAvailable
5 credits
Flash
ProAvailable
5 credits
FlashThinking

How to Use Topic Generator

Get better topic ideas in three steps

Step 1
Describe the

Describe the purpose

Tell the topic generator what you need topics for, such as an essay, class, blog, podcast, debate, or conversation.

Step 2
Choose type

Choose type and audience

Select the topic type, number of ideas, audience, tone, and how specific the suggestions should be.

Step 3
Generate and

Generate and refine

Review the ideas, pick the strongest angle, then run another version with tighter constraints if needed.

Key Features of Topic Generator

A focused topic generator for practical ideas, not just random words

Purpose-Aware
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Purpose-Aware Topic Ideas

Generate topics for writing, blogs, debates, lessons, podcasts, videos, meetings, or casual conversation with context built in.

Audience
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Audience and Tone Controls

Shape each idea for beginners, students, customers, teams, creators, or niche communities with practical, creative, funny, or thoughtful tone.

Angles
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Angles and Follow-Up Questions

Receive more than a title: each topic includes why it works, where to use it, and a next question or angle.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions with Topic Generator

Practical answers about using a topic generator for writing, teaching, content, and conversation

What is a topic generator?

A topic generator is a tool that creates topic ideas when you know the general purpose but do not know what to write, discuss, teach, or record next. This topic generator turns your context into usable ideas instead of giving only random words. You can use it for blog posts, essays, classroom debates, social videos, podcasts, meetings, or conversation starters. Add the audience and goal, and the output becomes much more focused. This helps when the blank page is the problem while keeping ideas relevant.

How do I use this topic generator?

Describe what you need topics for, choose the topic type, add the audience if you know it, and pick how many ideas you want. The topic generator then returns a numbered list with a clear topic, best use, reason, and follow-up angle. If the first list feels too broad, tighten the context with a niche, grade level, industry, format, or point of view before generating again. You can copy the best idea, adjust the wording, or run another list with narrower details.

Is this topic generator free to use?

Yes, this topic generator is free to try with the included credit system. Guests receive 10 credits per day, free registered users receive 100 credits per month, and subscribers get more credits based on their plan. Each request uses the credit amount configured for this tool, so do not treat credits as a fixed number of generations. Your remaining balance controls how often you can run it. The credit wording is shown this way because each tool can have a different credit cost per request.

Can I use the topic generator without an account?

You can use the topic generator without an account while guest credits are available. Guest access is useful for a quick writing prompt, discussion question, or content idea. Creating a free account gives you monthly credits and makes longer ideation sessions easier to manage. If you plan to compare several lists for class, marketing, or publishing, signing in first is usually more convenient. It is a good option when you only need a few ideas before deciding whether to build a longer plan.

What kinds of topics can it generate?

The topic generator can create writing topics, blog ideas, research questions, debate prompts, classroom discussion ideas, social media angles, podcast subjects, video topics, and conversation starters. It works best when the purpose is clear. For example, “technology topics for middle school debate” will produce sharper results than “technology.” You can also ask for funny, practical, thoughtful, broad, balanced, or niche ideas. Strong context usually creates stronger ideas than asking for a category name with no audience or goal.

Is this better than a random topic list?

A random topic list can help when you only need a quick spark, but it often ignores audience, format, and intent. This topic generator uses your context, topic type, tone, specificity, and constraints to shape each suggestion. That makes the ideas easier to use in real work. You also get why each topic works and a follow-up angle, not just a bare phrase. That extra context makes the list easier to turn into a real outline, lesson, post, or talking point.

Can teachers use this for classroom activities?

Yes, teachers can use the topic generator for essays, speaking practice, warmups, debate lessons, group discussion, project prompts, and creative writing activities. Add the grade level, subject, time limit, and any topics to avoid. For debate topics, ask for balanced questions that allow more than one reasonable view. For younger students, choose practical or creative tone and mention the reading level. The results can also become warmups, homework prompts, journal questions, or small group discussion cards.

Can marketers and creators use it for content ideas?

Marketers, bloggers, YouTubers, podcasters, and social teams can use this topic generator to break a broad theme into publishable ideas. Give it the audience, channel, product category, and desired angle. The tool can suggest educational topics, opinion angles, comparison ideas, question-led posts, and beginner-friendly explainers. It is especially useful before keyword research, editorial planning, or recording sessions. For best results, include the channel and the audience pain point rather than asking for general ideas.

How can I get more specific topic ideas?

To get more specific topic ideas, include the audience, niche, format, goal, and one or two constraints. Instead of asking for “fitness topics,” try “fitness topics for busy parents who want 15-minute home workouts.” The topic generator can then avoid obvious ideas and suggest angles with clearer use. Choosing the niche specificity option also pushes the output toward narrower, more actionable topics. You can also mention topics to avoid, which keeps the list away from angles you already used.

What should I do after generating topics?

After using the topic generator, choose the idea with the clearest audience, strongest angle, and easiest next step. Turn it into a title, outline, discussion question, or content brief. If two ideas are close, combine them or ask for a second list focused on the stronger direction. You can also paste one generated topic back into the tool and ask for subtopics, examples, or debate angles. The goal is not to accept every suggestion, but to find a direction worth developing further.

Still have questions?

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