Drop in a URL and a keyword. Get back algorithm-tuned Pinterest titles and descriptions, written in the language Pinterest's search engine actually rewards.
No more blank-page guesswork.
Algorithm-tuned titles that hit Pinterest's title weight rules
Descriptions structured around hook, value, audience, and soft CTA
Primary keyword + supporting long-tail variants in every output
Bulk mode: paste a list of URLs and process them in one pass
One emotion word per title - no spammy stacking
Battle-tested formulas pulled from 16+ years of Pinterest analytics
Designed to slot into your existing workflow in minutes, not weeks.
Drop in the page you're pinning to and the primary keyword you want to rank for.
Each output goes through hard rules for length, keyword density, formula structure, and tone.
Paste the title and description straight into Pinterest, Tailwind, or your scheduler of choice.
Every output is grounded in proven Pinterest strategy, not generic AI guesswork.
Titles and descriptions are read by the algorithm to score relevance. The generator writes for the bot first, the human second.
Outputs use formulas like '[Number] Secrets to [Outcome]' and 'The Ultimate Guide to [Keyword]' - structures Laura has tested across millions of impressions.
Every description follows: hook with primary keyword, what's inside with supporting keyword, who it's for with long-tail, soft action prompt.
No keyword stuffing, no banned phrases, no automation that violates Pinterest's Terms of Service.
"I built this generator because I was writing the same title and description framework hundreds of times a month for clients. Now you get the same playbook I've used to grow accounts to millions of monthly viewers - in seconds."
Laura Rike - Pinterest Strategist, 16+ years
A good Pinterest pin title is specific, keyword-led, and promises a clear outcome. It puts the primary keyword in the first 40 characters, names the audience or use case, and uses one emotion or curiosity trigger - never a stack of them. The job of the title is to win the click in a vertical scroll, not to sound clever.
Critical. Pinterest is a search engine, and the title is one of the most heavily weighted relevance signals. Without the right keyword in the title, the pin will not surface in search or related-pin feeds, no matter how good the image is.
Usually not. Web titles are written for Google and on-page context. Pinterest titles need to be reframed around how pinners actually search - shorter phrases, intent-led keywords, and outcome language. Reuse the topic, rewrite the title.
Pinterest allows up to 100 characters. Aim for 40 to 70 characters with the primary keyword in the first half. That range stays fully visible in mobile feeds and gives the algorithm enough text to score relevance.
Yes. Titles feed both Pinterest's internal search ranking and external Google indexing of pin pages. A keyword-tuned title can be the difference between a pin that gets 50 impressions and one that gets 50,000.
Yes, when the content is genuinely seasonal. Pinterest users plan 30 to 90 days ahead, so seasonal keywords should be added before the season hits. The generator has a seasonal focus toggle that handles this for you.
Use Pinterest's own search bar autocomplete, the Trends tool, and the guided pills under search results. The Keyword Strategy tool inside PIN Hacking Growth pulls from these signals and clusters them into title-ready phrases.
The title is the headline that hooks the click. The description is the supporting context that adds long-tail keywords, explains what's inside, names the audience, and includes a soft action prompt. Both are indexed, but they have different jobs.
Often, yes. Numbers signal scannable, structured content - '7 Easy Dinners,' '15 Living Room Ideas' - and consistently lift click-through rates. The generator has a toggle to bias outputs toward numbered titles when it fits the content type.
Each format has its own pattern: how-tos lead with the outcome, recipes lead with the dish and dietary qualifier, products lead with the use case and audience, and inspiration pins lead with the aesthetic. The generator picks the right formula based on the content type you select.
Yes. Pinterest lets you edit a pin's title and description at any time, and re-indexing usually happens within a few days. Refreshing underperforming titles is a fast win for older content.
Rich Pins pull metadata from your site's Open Graph or schema tags, so the title on the pin reflects what's on your page. Keep your meta titles Pinterest-friendly, or override them at pin creation - the generator gives you copy you can paste into either layer.
Keyword stuffing, vague clickbait, all caps, emoji spam, hashtag stacking, and reusing the exact same title across multiple pins. Each one signals low quality to Pinterest and suppresses distribution.
Watch impressions, outbound click rate, and saves in Pinterest Analytics. Compare titles within the same content cluster to isolate what the headline is doing. The Planner tool inside PIN Hacking Growth pulls this data alongside Google Analytics so you can see which titles drive real traffic.
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