Free Ad Headline Generator
Turn a few lines about your company into ad headlines people actually click. This ad headline generator gives you a batch of short, sharp options for Google, Facebook, and more — pick the one that fits and run it.
- A batch of headline options, not one safe guess
- Built for search ads, display ads, and social campaigns
- Goals panel sets audience, tone, and intent
- No signup, no caps — generate as many as you want
What Makes an Ad Headline Worth the Click?
The headline is the part of your ad people read first — sometimes the only part. It has a couple of seconds to say what you offer and why it matters. Get it right and the click follows. Get it wrong and the rest of your ad budget never gets a chance.
Writing a good one is harder than it looks. You have six to twelve words, no room for fluff, and you usually need several versions to test. Doing that by hand for every campaign drains time you do not have. An ad headline generator hands you a full batch of options so you start with choices instead of a blank field.
This tool writes the headline copy — the short hook line at the top of the ad. You bring your company name, who you are selling to, and a keyword or two. It returns headlines you can drop straight into Google Ads, a Facebook campaign, or a banner, then tweak to taste.
A hook in a few words
Good ad headlines run six to twelve words. Every option you get is tight on purpose — long enough to be clear, short enough to land before someone scrolls past.
A batch, not one guess
You get a set of headlines in one run, each from a slightly different angle. Pick your favorite, or grab two for an A/B test.
Aimed at your audience
Tell the tool who you are selling to and the headlines speak their language — the words a buyer would use, not vague filler.
Built for paid ads
These are headlines for ads you pay to run, where the click costs money. The copy leans on benefits and action, so the spend works harder.
Three Things a Headline Has to Do
Most generators just rephrase your keyword. This one is built around the three jobs an ad headline actually has to pull off.
Catch the Eye
The scroll-stop test
People skim ads fast. A headline has to break the scroll with a clear promise or a sharp angle. The generator front-loads the benefit so the line stops the reader instead of blending in.
Say What You Offer
The clarity job
A clever headline that hides the offer wastes a click. Each option names what you do in plain words, so the reader knows in a second whether the ad is for them.
Push the Click
The action edit
A headline that just describes you is a missed chance. The drafts lean on action and value — a reason to click now, not a label that sits there doing nothing.
From Blank Field to Finished Headlines
Add your company details
Type your company name and a short description of what you do. A sentence or two is plenty — the more specific, the sharper the headlines.
Name your audience
Say who you are trying to reach. The tool shapes the wording around that buyer so the headlines feel aimed, not generic.
Drop in your keywords
Add the keywords your campaign targets. They work their way into the headlines naturally, which keeps the ad relevant to the search.
Generate and pick
Hit Generate and get a batch of headlines in seconds. Copy the ones you like, edit the wording, and load them into your campaign.
For Anyone Running Ads
PPC & Paid Search Marketers
Spin up Google Ads headline variations for every ad group without burning an afternoon on copy.
Social Media Advertisers
Write headlines for Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn campaigns that match each audience and platform.
Agencies & Freelancers
Turn out fresh headline batches for client after client, all on time and on brief.
Online Store Owners
Promote products and sales with headlines that name the offer and the deal in a few words.
Founders & Small Teams
Test ad copy without hiring a copywriter — generate options, run them, see what clicks.
Local Service Businesses
Write headlines that match what nearby customers search for, from plumbing to tutoring.
Trusted by Marketers and Founders
“I manage a dozen Google Ads accounts. Getting a batch of headline options in seconds means I always have something fresh to test instead of recycling the same three lines.”
“New client briefs used to mean an hour staring at a blank doc. Now I drop in their details and start from a real list of headlines. It saves me real time every week.”
“I run my own Facebook ads and copywriting is not my thing. This gives me headlines that sound like a buyer, not a brochure. My click-through rate went up.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the ad headline generator free?
Yes. Add your company details, audience, and keywords, then generate — no signup, no credit card, no daily caps. Run it as many times as you want.
What does the tool actually generate?
A batch of short ad headlines built from your inputs. Each run gives you several options, each from a slightly different angle, so you can pick a favorite or test two against each other.
Can I use these headlines for Google Ads and Facebook?
Yes. The headlines work for search ads, display ads, and social campaigns on Google, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and more. Copy the ones that fit and load them into your campaign.
How long are the generated headlines?
Most run six to twelve words. That keeps them clear and quick to read, and it fits the character limits on platforms like Google Ads where space is tight.
Do I need ad copywriting experience to use it?
No. You bring a few facts about your company, your audience, and your keywords. The tool handles the phrasing, so you start with solid headlines even if copywriting is not your thing.
Can I edit the headlines or generate new ones?
Of course. Treat each result as a fast first draft — copy it and change any wording you want. If a batch is not quite right, generate again for fresh angles in seconds.
How do I pick the best headline?
Look for the option that names your offer clearly and gives a reason to click. When two feel close, run both as an A/B test and let the click-through rate decide.
Will a better headline get my ad more clicks?
It usually helps. The headline is the first thing people read, so a clear, benefit-led line gives undecided readers a reason to click. A sharper headline plus testing is the fastest way to lift your results.
