Source text
Paste a title, heading, file name, or short phrase to create a clean slug.
Create clean URL slugs from titles, headings, product names, file names, or short phrases. Choose separators, lowercase formatting, and character cleanup, then copy the generated slug for your CMS, blog, documentation, or redirect workflow.
Paste a title, heading, file name, or short phrase to create a clean slug.
Copy, download, or reuse the generated URL slug.
Paste a page title, product name, documentation heading, or other source text into the input box. Adjust the separator and cleanup options, then use the generated slug in your CMS, routing system, file name, or redirect plan.
Paste or type the title you want to convert.
Choose a hyphen or underscore separator.
Keep lowercase enabled for consistent, readable slugs.
Copy or download the generated slug when it looks right.
A slug generator is useful when you need consistent readable URL fragments without manually fixing spaces, punctuation, casing, and special characters.
Turn blog post titles into clean URL paths.
Create CMS slugs for product pages, landing pages, or documentation.
Normalize file names, redirect labels, or short content identifiers.
Remove messy punctuation from copied headings before publishing.
Clean URL slugs can help people understand a link and can make content management easier. They do not guarantee rankings by themselves, but consistent readable slugs are usually easier to review, share, and maintain.
Prefer short, descriptive words over long stuffed phrases.
Use lowercase and hyphens for common web URL formatting.
Avoid punctuation, duplicate separators, and trailing separators.
Keep important words but remove clutter when a title is very long.
A URL slug is the readable part of a URL that usually describes a page, such as a blog post title or product name converted into lowercase words separated by hyphens.
A clean slug can make URLs easier to read and manage, but it does not guarantee rankings. Use it as one small part of a useful, well-structured page.
Hyphens are the common choice for readable web URLs. Underscores can still be useful for file names or internal systems, so this tool lets you choose either separator.
No. The slug is generated in your browser. Still, avoid pasting private drafts, client data, unreleased product names, or sensitive internal URLs into any online utility.