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Marketing

Tweet Generator

Turn an idea into 5 ready-to-post X (Twitter) options or a numbered thread — punchy, honest, under 280 characters each. Free, no signup, nothing stored.

AI-generated — always review before you use it. We don't store your inputs or results.

✳ Free · No signup · Runs in your browser — we never store your numbers

Small business guide

What this tool helps you do

Use this free tweet generator to turn a topic into five ready-to-post X posts, or one numbered thread when the idea needs more room. Every option comes in under 280 characters, uses at most one hashtag, and skips the engagement-bait tricks — no "RT if you agree," no fake controversy.

It's built for small business owners who know they should post but don't have twenty minutes to agonize over 280 characters. Say what you want to get across — a launch, a tip, an opinion, this week's special — optionally set a tone, and pick between five standalone options or a thread. Copy the one that sounds like you.

How to use this tool

  1. 1

    Describe what you want to say — the news, the tip, or the point you want to make.

  2. 2

    Optionally pick a tone so the posts match how your account already sounds.

  3. 3

    Choose a format: 5 standalone posts to pick from, or one numbered thread for a bigger idea.

  4. 4

    Click generate and review the options, each separated by a divider with its own copy button.

  5. 5

    Copy your favorite, tweak a word or two so it's yours, and post it.

Examples

Announcing a new menu item

A taco shop wants to post about a new brisket taco launching Friday.

Inputs

  • What do you want to say?: New smoked brisket taco launches Friday, 14-hour smoke, limited batch each day
  • Tone: Playful
  • Format: 5 standalone posts

Result

Five takes on the same news — one leading with the 14-hour smoke, one with the limited batch, one as a short story, one as a plain announcement, one asking a genuine question — each under 280 characters with at most one hashtag.

Five angles beat one draft because you recognize your voice when you see it. The concrete details (14 hours, limited batch) are what make the posts work — vague briefs get vague tweets.

Turning expertise into a thread

A bookkeeper wants to share what small businesses get wrong about quarterly taxes.

Inputs

  • What do you want to say?: The 4 quarterly tax mistakes I see small businesses make and how to avoid each one
  • Tone: Straightforward, helpful
  • Format: One thread

Result

A numbered thread — an opening post that says exactly what the thread covers, one post per mistake with the fix, and a short closer. No "🧵 you NEED to read this," just the four mistakes.

Threads earn attention by delivering, not teasing. If any post in the draft doesn't state a fact you can stand behind, cut or correct it before posting.

Key terms

Standalone post

A single post that works on its own with no thread context. Best for announcements, offers, and one-liner tips.

Thread

A numbered series of connected posts. Use it when the idea genuinely needs more than 280 characters — not to stretch a one-post thought.

Engagement bait

Posts engineered to farm replies and shares — "RT if you agree," rage hooks, fake cliffhangers. X's ranking systems and your actual customers both punish it, so this tool doesn't write it.

How to interpret the result

Pick the option that sounds like you already

The five options exist so you can choose by recognition, not construction — the right one reads like something you'd have typed on a good day. If none of them do, add a tone note or a more specific detail to your brief and regenerate; don't force a post that's off-voice, because followers notice.

A draft, not a scheduler

The output is a draft to review, same as anything AI writes. Check that every claim, price, and date is true before posting — the generator writes from your brief, and it will state your details confidently whether or not you typed them correctly. For longer-form promotion of the same news, our AI Content Writer and AI Email Writer cover the blog and inbox versions.

Common mistakes

  • Posting the first option without reading the other four — the best angle is often the third or fourth.
  • Writing a vague brief like "promote my business" instead of a specific piece of news, tip, or opinion.
  • Adding hashtags back in; one relevant hashtag at most is the ceiling, and zero usually reads better.
  • Choosing thread format for an idea that fits in one post — padding loses readers by post two.
  • Generating posts and never posting them; a good-enough post today beats a perfect one that stays in your drafts.

Frequently asked questions

Is this tweet generator really free?+

Yes — free, no signup, no watermark, no credit card. We rate-limit heavy use so it stays free for everyone.

Do you store my topics or the generated posts?+

No. Your topic goes to the AI model to generate the posts and the results are shown to you — we don't save either.

Are the posts really under 280 characters?+

Yes, that's a hard constraint the generator works within, so every option fits a standard X post. Give it a quick glance anyway if you edit — your additions count against the limit too.

Can it post to X for me?+

No. It writes the options; you copy the one you like and post it from your own account. You stay in control of what goes out under your name.

Why no engagement bait or hashtag walls?+

Because they don't work for businesses. Engagement bait attracts replies from people who will never buy from you, and hashtag pileups read as spam. Posts that say something specific in your own voice build the audience you actually want.

How often should a small business post on X?+

Consistency beats volume — a few genuine posts a week outperform daily filler. Use the generator to batch a week of options in one sitting, then spread them out.