Free Twitter Thread Generator
Turn one idea into a full thread — a scroll-stopping hook, body tweets that flow, and a closing call-to-action. Type a topic, pick a tone, and get a connected Twitter/X thread you can post.
- A complete thread — hook tweet, body tweets, and a CTA tweet
- Every tweet stays under the 280-character limit
- Writes in 25+ languages, not just English
- No signup, no caps — generate as many drafts as you want
What Makes a Twitter Thread Worth Reading?
A thread lives or dies on the first tweet. If the hook does not pull people in, the rest never gets read. After that, each tweet has to carry one clear idea and hand the reader a reason to keep tapping. End with a tweet that asks for something — a follow, a reply, a link click.
Writing all of that by hand is slow. You sketch a hook, pad out the middle, count characters, then rewrite half of it because tweet four wandered off topic. A Twitter thread generator skips that grind and hands you a full draft, so a tight, connected thread becomes your starting point instead of a blank box.
One thing to be clear about: this tool writes the thread for you. It is not a tool that chops a long blog post into 280-character chunks, and it does not make fake-tweet screenshots. You bring a topic, and you get original tweets that connect into a real thread.
A hook that stops the scroll
Tweet one is the whole game. Every thread opens with a curiosity hook, a bold claim, or a sharp question built around your topic — the line that makes someone stop and read.
The full thread, not a fragment
You get a hook tweet, a run of body tweets that each make one point, and a closing call-to-action tweet. A complete thread, numbered and ready to post.
Every tweet fits the limit
Each tweet comes back under 280 characters, so you never have to trim a sentence or split a thought across two posts after the fact.
One idea per tweet
The draft keeps a single point in each tweet, so readers follow the thread cleanly instead of bouncing off a wall of text.
Three Jobs Every Thread Has to Do
Most thread tools just slice your text into chunks. This one is built around the three things a thread actually needs to pull off.
Earn the First Tap
The hook test
People decide in a second whether to read on. The generator front-loads a real hook — a question, a promise, or a claim — so tweet one does its job and the rest gets a chance.
Keep the Reader Moving
The flow edit
A thread that repeats itself or jumps around loses people halfway. Each tweet carries one idea and leads into the next, so the reader keeps tapping instead of dropping off.
Ask for the Action
The closing tweet
A thread that just stops wastes the attention you earned. Every draft ends with a call-to-action tweet — follow, reply, or click — so the thread does something instead of fizzling out.
From One Idea to a Finished Thread
Enter your thread topic
Type what the thread is about — a sentence or two is enough. The more specific the topic, the sharper the tweets you get back.
Pick a language
Choose from 25+ languages. The whole thread — hook, body, and closing tweet — comes back written in the one you pick.
Set your goals
Use the Goals panel to set audience, tone, and intent, so the thread sounds like your account instead of a generic feed.
Generate and post
Hit Generate and get a full thread in seconds. Copy it, tweak any wording, and post it tweet by tweet on X.
For Every Kind of X Account
Content Creators & Writers
Turn a single idea into a thread that grows your following — without spending an hour staring at tweet one.
Social Media Managers
Draft on-brand threads for client accounts fast, so the posting calendar stays full without the blank-box stall.
Founders & Solopreneurs
Share lessons, launches, and behind-the-scenes stories as clean threads, even on the days you have no time to write.
Small Business Owners
Explain a product, a tip, or an offer in a thread people actually read — no copywriter and no SEO course needed.
Educators & Coaches
Break a topic into a teaching thread that lands one point per tweet, in whatever language your audience speaks.
Agencies & Teams
Keep thread quality and tone consistent across many accounts and writers, with one tool and one standard.
Trusted by Creators and Marketers
“I used to spend forty minutes on a thread and still hate the hook. Now I drop in the topic, get a full draft with a strong opener, and edit from there.”
“I run threads for six client accounts. This keeps the tone consistent and saves me a couple of hours every week.”
“I post in English and German. Getting the same thread written cleanly in both languages from one topic line is the part I keep coming back for.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Twitter thread generator free?
Yes. Enter a topic, pick a language, and generate — no signup, no credit card, no daily caps. Write as many thread drafts as you want.
What does the tool actually generate?
One complete thread for your topic: a hook tweet to open, a run of body tweets that each make a single point, and a closing call-to-action tweet. The tweets are numbered and ready to post on X.
How many tweets are in a generated thread?
Most threads come back with about 5 to 10 tweets. That is long enough to develop the idea and short enough that readers stay with you to the end.
Do the tweets stay under the 280-character limit?
They do. Every tweet is written to fit X's 280-character limit, so you do not have to trim sentences or split a thought across two posts.
Does it split a long post into a thread, or write a new one?
It writes a new thread. This is not a tool that chops an existing blog post or long text into 280-character chunks — you give it a topic and it produces original tweets that connect.
Can I generate threads in languages other than English?
Yes — more than 25 languages are supported. Pick yours before generating and the whole thread comes back written in that language.
Can I change the tone of the thread?
You can. The Goals panel lets you set tone, audience, and intent, so the thread can read funny, informative, or straight-to-the-point depending on what your account needs.
Can I edit the thread or generate a new one?
Of course. Treat the result as a fast first draft — copy it and reword any tweet you want. If the angle is not quite right, generate again for a fresh take in seconds.
