Turn a topic into 25 hashtags
Describe your post and get a full set in one go, instead of scrolling through other accounts to copy their tags one at a time.
Describe your post, add an optional niche, and get 25 hashtags you can copy into your caption. Free, no sign-up, no app.
It is a tool that turns a short description of your post into a ready set of relevant hashtags. You type what you are posting about, pick a niche or format if you want, and it returns tags you can copy straight into your caption.
Each run returns 25 hashtags, every one prefixed with #, each with its own character count and copy button. Since Instagram now counts up to 5 hashtags per post, treat the 25 as a shortlist: copy your five strongest and leave the rest.
Instagram now counts up to 5 hashtags on a post; the familiar 30-hashtag limit did not vanish, it now applies to a single comment instead. With only five to spend, relevance beats volume: pick the tags that match your exact topic and skip the rest.
Start from your actual topic and niche rather than generic popular tags. Mix a couple of broad high-volume hashtags with several specific, lower-competition ones so smaller posts still surface. Describing your post here gives you that mix in one step.
It is a structure from the 30-hashtag era: three broad hashtags, three niche ones, and three specific to your post. Now that Instagram counts up to 5, you cannot run a full 3-3-3 in the caption, but the spirit still holds: take one or two broad tags plus a few niche ones rather than going all broad.
Yes. Set the post format to Reel and the tool tailors tags toward short-form video discovery. You can also leave the format on Any if you want a more general set that works across reels, photos, and stories.
The most popular tags also carry the most competition, so your post gets buried fast. Likes tend to follow relevance, not raw popularity: tags that match your exact topic and reach the right audience are usually a better starting point than broad trending tags.
Vary them per post rather than reusing one fixed block every time. Repeating the same list can look spammy and limits how many communities you reach. Generating a fresh set tied to each post's topic keeps your tags relevant.
Yes, they still help Instagram categorize your post and surface it in hashtag feeds, search, and Explore. They work best on top of strong content, paired with tags that genuinely describe what you posted.
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