Free draft generator

Create Complete Articles Instantly with a Free AI Draft Generator

Convert a title, brief, or bullet list into a polished first draft—complete with H1/H2 structure, meta title and description, suggested keywords, and a sources section for easy fact-checking. Export clean Markdown or HTML for your CMS.

For content marketers and SEO teams

Why content teams use a free AI article generator

Speed up first drafts and remove writer’s block while keeping editorial control. Produce consistent, on-brand copy at scale by feeding a title, brief, or outline into an SEO-aware generator that outputs organized sections, transition sentences, and an editable sources list.

  • Faster first drafts reduce time-to-publish and simplify review cycles
  • Consistent structure and tone controls help multiple writers produce uniform content
  • Citation-aware drafting makes it easier to attribute sources and check facts

Source ecosystem

What you can feed the generator

Use single web pages, local draft files, research notes, spreadsheets, or internal KB exports as the basis for a draft. The generator can incorporate copied research, PDF briefs, CSV topic lists, or a short outline to produce a full article with source callouts.

  • Single seed URL or page as the primary source
  • Plain text, Markdown, or Word document uploads
  • Copy-and-paste notes from Google Docs or Notion
  • Spreadsheet/CSV rows for batch topic generation
  • PDF research briefs or internal knowledge-base exports

Practical prompt clusters

Prompt templates tuned for SEO and editing

Choose a prompt pattern depending on your workflow: quick drafts from a title, outline expansion, SEO-first drafting, or batch topic expansion. Each template returns a structured draft plus metadata for SEO and CMS-ready export.

Quick Draft from Title

One-step draft from a headline or topic. Produces a 700–1,000 word article with a 2-sentence intro, three subheadings, and a short conclusion.

  • Example prompt: “Write a 800-word article for content marketers on [title]. Include a 2-sentence intro, 3 H2s, and one-paragraph conclusion. Tone: [tone].”

Outline-to-Article

Expand a provided outline into complete paragraphs while preserving headings and adding transitions.

  • Example prompt: “Expand this outline into full paragraphs. Maintain headings exactly. Add transition sentences and one CTA.”

SEO-First Article

Generate an article optimized around a primary keyword plus two related keywords, with meta title and description ready for publishing.

  • Example prompt: “Create an article optimized for [primary keyword] and two related keywords. Provide H1, H2s, a meta title (<=60 chars), and meta description (<=160 chars).”

Copy-ready drafts

Outputs and export formats

Receive drafts formatted for quick editing and CMS import: clean Markdown, simplified HTML, or plain text with clear headings and a sources section. Drafts include suggested CTAs and short FAQ blocks that can be used for on-page schema.

  • Clean Markdown or minimal HTML for direct CMS paste
  • Editable 'Sources' section listing origin URLs or file names
  • Suggested meta title, description, and headline variations for A/B testing

How various teams use it

Workflow examples by role

Practical use cases for the generator across marketing and product teams to reduce manual drafting work and improve consistency.

Content Marketers

Turn topic lists into publishable drafts and SEO metadata without switching tools.

  • Batch-generate article skeletons from a spreadsheet of topics
  • Export to Markdown and finish in your CMS editor

SEO Specialists

Produce keyword-focused drafts with meta tags and H2 structure ready for optimization.

  • Use the SEO-First template to include target and related keywords
  • Generate FAQ entries suitable for FAQ schema

Freelance Writers & Agencies

Accelerate first drafts and hand off cleaner copy for quick client revisions.

  • Start from a client brief or seed URL, then refine tone and length controls
  • Create multiple headline variations for A/B testing

Quick setup

Getting started in three steps

Start with your input source, select a template, and export the draft into your preferred editor.

  • 1) Provide a title, upload a brief, or paste an outline
  • 2) Pick a prompt template (Quick Draft, Outline-to-Article, SEO-First) and set tone/length
  • 3) Review the generated draft, check the Sources section, then export as Markdown or HTML

Tone, length, and structure

Content controls and brand consistency

Adjust configurable controls to keep drafts aligned with your brand voice and editorial standards. Set tone (e.g., professional, conversational), target word count, and whether to include a CTA or FAQ block.

  • Tone presets for consistent voice across multiple drafts
  • Length sliders to enforce short, medium, or long draft sizes
  • Option to include or omit citation callouts and a sources section

FAQ

How does the generator use my source material and how do I add citations?

Provide a seed URL, upload a document, or paste research notes; the generator extracts key points and includes inline source callouts and a dedicated 'Sources' section listing originals. You can edit or remove callouts before export to match your citation policy.

What controls let me keep articles consistent with our brand voice?

Use tone presets (professional, conversational, friendly, technical), set a target length, and enable a style guide snippet to bias phrasing. These controls apply across generated drafts so multiple writers produce uniform output.

Can I create SEO-friendly meta titles and descriptions from the draft?

Yes. Choose the SEO-First template to receive a meta title (<=60 chars), meta description (<=160 chars), H1 and H2 structure, and a list of suggested keywords alongside the article draft.

How do I turn a short outline or bullet list into a full article?

Use the Outline-to-Article or Bullet Expansion templates. Provide your outline or bullets and select desired length and tone—outputs preserve your headings and expand each point into complete paragraphs with transition sentences and a concluding CTA if requested.

What export or copy workflows are available to move drafts into my CMS or editor?

Export clean Markdown, simplified HTML, or plain text. Generated drafts include clear headings, a sources section, and suggested CTAs, minimizing cleanup when pasting into most CMS editors.

How do I check and edit factual claims or technical details the generator produces?

Review the Sources section first—links or file names point back to your research. Use the inline callouts to find origins quickly, then edit any technical details manually or add a secondary review step in your editorial process.

Are there recommended prompt patterns for turning research notes into publishable copy?

Yes. Common patterns include: Quick Draft from Title, Outline-to-Article, SEO-First Article, and Technical Explainer with Sources. Each pattern has a short example prompt to produce consistent, editable drafts.

Can I generate multiple variations or A/B headlines for the same article?

Yes. Use the headline-variation option to create several H1 candidates and short meta descriptions. Export these options alongside the main draft for easy A/B testing.

Related pages

  • PricingCompare plans and access export limits and collaboration features.
  • ComparisonSee how the draft workflow differs from other AI writing tools.
  • BlogGuides and prompts for better AI-generated drafts and SEO-first workflows.
  • AboutLearn about the team and product principles behind the generator.
  • IndustriesExamples of how marketing teams in different industries use draft generation.