📊 Tweet Analyzer
Score any tweet for engagement potential. Get AI-powered analysis and actionable improvement suggestions.
XTakeoff uses this same AI to find and reply to the best tweets in your niche — automatically. Learn more →
How the Tweet Analyzer Works
This tool uses AI to evaluate your tweet across five key dimensions: hook quality (does your opening grab attention?), clarity (is your message instantly understandable?), emotional appeal (does it trigger a reaction?), CTA strength (does it encourage likes, replies, or shares?), and virality potential (would people retweet this?). You get an overall score from 1-100, a letter grade, and specific suggestions to improve.
High-scoring tweets have a strong hook in the first line, evoke an emotional response (humor, surprise, inspiration), are concise and clear, and encourage engagement through questions, bold statements, or direct calls to action. Tweets between 71-100 characters tend to get the most engagement. Using numbers, line breaks, and relatable scenarios also boost scores.
The engagement prediction is based on AI analysis of tweet structure, language patterns, and content characteristics that historically correlate with higher engagement on X/Twitter. While no tool can guarantee virality (timing, audience size, and context matter too), this gives you a data-informed estimate of how your tweet compares to high-performing content.
Hook (1-10): How well the first line grabs attention. Clarity (1-10): How easy it is to understand your message. Emotion (1-10): The emotional impact and relatability. CTA (1-10): How effectively it drives likes, replies, or retweets. Virality (1-10): The shareability and potential to spread beyond your followers.
This tool is designed for single tweets (up to 1,000 characters to accommodate longer posts on X). For threads, analyze the first tweet since that is what determines whether people keep reading. The hook tweet is the most important part of any thread.
The AI-optimized version is a suggestion, not a mandate. Use it as inspiration. Sometimes the rewrite nails it, other times your original voice is better. The most useful part is the specific improvement suggestions — pick the ones that feel right for your style and audience, and keep your authentic voice intact.