Generate 10 calls to action for any offer

Describe what you're promoting and get ten ready-to-use CTAs, each action-led, benefit-driven, and short enough to drop into a post, page, or email. Free, no sign-up.

Call-to-Action Generator

Describe what you're promoting. Optionally add platform and goal.

What are you promoting? Plain language works best.

Where will the CTA appear?

What action should the user take?

Once you generate a batch, we’ll help you shortlist the lines that fit your offer and pick the one to test first.
How it works

Generate calls to action in three steps

Say what you're promoting and get ten ready calls to action for a post, page, or email.

Step 1: Describe your offer

Type what you're promoting in plain language. Optionally add the platform and the action you want, like sign up or book a call.

Step 2: We write 10 CTAs

The generator returns ten action-led options, each tied to a benefit and kept short enough to drop into an ad or a button.

Step 3: Copy the one that fits

Pick the CTA that matches your goal, copy it, and paste it where attention peaks. Generate again any time.

Free to use No sign-up required Ready to paste
Read your result

What you can learn from your CTAs

Read the ten CTAs as a menu of angles. Some will fit your offer, some will read too generic, and one or two will be worth testing first.

  • What stands out

    The top results usually pair your core benefit with a single verb. Those are the safest to use as-is, since they name what the reader gets and what to do.

  • Patterns

    Notice the mix: urgent phrasing ("before the next cohort fills"), low-stakes asks ("start free"), and benefit-first ones. That spread is how the set covers different reader mindsets.

  • Opportunities

    A wording you hadn't considered, like leading with "cancel anytime" instead of a discount, can surface an angle worth trying in your headline or button too.

  • Weak spots

    Any CTA that could sit under a different offer is too generic. If swapping "meal plan" for "course" still reads fine, it isn't specific enough to keep.

  • Context

    The wording signals how much it asks. "See how it works" reads as a soft, early step; "Claim your discount" assumes the reader is ready. Spotting which is which tells you how warm an audience each one suits.

  • What to ignore

    Skip any CTA that overpromises or adds pressure your offer can't back, like "last chance" on an evergreen download. Pushy phrasing reads as spam and costs trust.

Why use it

What you can do with the CTA generator

Turn a one-line description of your offer into ten ready calls to action, each short, specific, and built around a clear next step.

Ten angles in one click

Instead of staring at one weak draft, you get ten directions at once: urgent, benefit-led, low-commitment. Keep the closest match and move on.

Verbs, not vague filler

Every CTA leads with an action and names a payoff, so you skip dead phrases like "click here" and "learn more" that give the reader no reason to act.

Tuned to where it runs

Add a platform and a goal and the CTAs shift to fit: a button on a landing page, the close of an email, the last line of a caption.

TRY SUBMAGIC FOR FREE

Create captioned videos in minutes

99% caption accuracy

4.7/5 on G2 (80+)

48+ supported languages

4,000,000+ users

Toolkit

Keep optimizing with Submagic

A CTA is the last line of a post. These tools write the caption, hook, and script it closes.

GYIK

Questions about the Call-to-Action Generator

What is a call to action?

A call to action, or CTA, is the line that tells your reader exactly what to do next: download the guide, book a call, start a trial. It turns interest into a single, specific action instead of leaving people to guess.

What is a call-to-action generator?

It is a free tool that writes ready-to-use CTAs from a short description of what you're promoting. You type your context, optionally add a platform and a goal, and it returns ten options you can copy straight into a post, page, or email.

How do I write a call to action?

Lead with a verb, name the one action you want, and make the payoff clear: "Grab the free checklist," not "Learn more." Keep it short, write in second person, and match the urgency to the offer. Generate a batch here if you're stuck.

What makes a strong call to action?

A strong CTA is specific, action-led, and tied to a real benefit. It names what the reader gets and removes friction, so "Start your 7-day trial, no card needed" beats a vague "Sign up." Clarity and a concrete next step matter more than clever wording.

What are good call-to-action phrases?

Phrases like "Get started free," "Claim your spot," "Download the guide," "Book a demo," and "Try it today" work because each one pairs a verb with a clear outcome. The generator builds variations like these around your specific offer instead of generic templates.

What should be included in a call to action?

An action verb, the specific thing the reader gets, and a reason to act now. Strong CTAs often add light urgency or remove a worry ("free," "no card needed," "cancel anytime"). Drop anything vague and keep it to one clear ask.

Can I use this for any niche or topic?

Yes. The context field is open text, so you can describe anything from a fitness coaching offer to a SaaS trial or a real-estate open house. The more detail you give about the offer and the audience, the more relevant the CTAs come back.

What should I say instead of "Buy Now"?

Swap "Buy Now" for something that fits the moment in the journey: "Start free," "See how it works," "Get the bundle," or "Claim your discount." Softer, benefit-led phrasing usually converts better when a reader isn't ready to commit yet.

Where should I place a call to action?

Put your main CTA where attention peaks: the end of a caption, the close of an email, a button above the fold on a landing page. One clear primary action per view works better than several competing buttons fighting for the click.

Kezdje el

Start creating shorts that get more views, faster.

Get Started Now
Próbálja ki ingyen

10× faster editing speed

+40% average views increase

80% reduction in editing cost