Free Merge Texts
Combine Multiple Texts Into One Clean, Structured Output
Merge two or more text blocks into a single, organized result. Ideal for combining AI drafts, consolidating research notes, merging sections from different writers, and preparing content for SEO editing—optionally remove duplicates, normalize formatting, and add separators.
Merged Text
Your merged text will appear here...
How the Text Merger Tool Works
Get results in seconds with a simple workflow.
Paste Your Text Blocks
Add two or more texts into the input box. Separate each block with a line that contains only --- so the tool can merge them accurately.
Choose Merge Options
Pick a merge mode, separator style, and dedupe strength. Keep order for simple compilation or allow reordering if you want a cleaner reading flow.
Merge, Review, and Copy
Generate the merged output, then skim for any edge-case duplicates or formatting preferences. Copy the final text into your editor, CMS, or SEO workflow.
See It in Action
Combine overlapping drafts into one clean version with less repetition and better flow—useful for content editing and SEO refresh workflows.
Text A: Keyword research helps you find terms people search for. It’s important for SEO.
Text B: Keyword research is important for SEO because it helps you discover what people search for and plan content.
Keyword research helps you discover the terms and questions people search for, which makes it easier to plan content that matches real demand and supports your SEO goals.
Why Use Our Text Merger Tool?
Powered by the latest AI to deliver fast, accurate results.
Merge Multiple Text Blocks Into One Output
Combine paragraphs, notes, drafts, and sections into a single clean text—useful for consolidating AI generations, writer handoffs, and content assembly.
Optional Duplicate & Near-Duplicate Removal
Remove repeated sentences and overlapping paragraphs to reduce redundancy—ideal when merging multiple drafts, outlines, or research summaries.
Consistent Formatting & Readability Cleanup
Normalize spacing, fix awkward breaks, and improve flow while preserving meaning—so the merged result is ready for editing, publishing, or SEO optimization.
Separator Controls for Clean Organization
Choose how blocks are separated (blank lines, rules, or none) to match your workflow—great for creating a single document from multiple sources.
SEO-Friendly Merge Mode for Content Consolidation
Combine overlapping SEO drafts into one cohesive version with consistent terminology and less repetition—without inventing new facts or adding fluff.
Pro Tips for Better Results
Get the most out of the Text Merger Tool with these expert tips.
Use --- between blocks for best merge accuracy
A clear delimiter prevents accidental blending of sentences and helps the tool treat each draft/section as a distinct block before combining them.
Start with Medium dedupe when merging AI drafts
AI drafts often repeat definitions and intros. Medium dedupe typically removes overlap without stripping unique supporting points.
Keep order ON when assembling long-form content
If you already have a logical structure (intro → sections → FAQ), preserving order prevents the merge from rearranging the narrative flow.
Choose Blank line separators for publish-ready formatting
Blank lines improve readability and make the merged text easier to scan, edit, and paste into most CMS editors without extra cleanup.
After merging for SEO, do a quick intent pass
Ensure the combined text answers the same search intent consistently (informational vs commercial). Remove any off-topic lines that slipped in from secondary drafts.
Who Is This For?
Trusted by millions of students, writers, and professionals worldwide.
Merge Texts Without Making a Mess of Your Draft
Merging text sounds simple until you actually do it.
You paste Draft A, then Draft B. Suddenly you have repeated intros, doubled definitions, random spacing, and that one sentence that shows up three times but slightly different each time. This is exactly where a text merger tool helps, not just to combine, but to combine cleanly.
This page is for those real situations. AI drafts that overlap. Notes you collected over a week. Two writers working on the same section. A landing page with five variants. You just want one solid version you can edit and publish.
What “Merge” Actually Means (And What It Should Not Do)
A good merge is not rewriting everything.
It is more like. Taking multiple blocks and assembling them into one readable piece, while keeping the meaning intact.
Depending on what you choose, merging can include:
- Putting blocks together in the right order
- Normalizing spacing and weird line breaks
- Removing duplicates or near duplicates
- Light cleanup so it reads like one document instead of pasted scraps
- Optional headings if you want structure (useful for long content)
If you are merging for SEO, you usually want consistency more than creativity. Same terms. Same wording for key concepts. Less repetition. No new claims added.
How to Format Your Input So You Get the Best Output
The simplest way to avoid merge errors is to make your blocks obvious.
Use a line that contains only:
---
That separator is the difference between “clean merge” and “why did these two paragraphs blend together”.
A quick checklist before you hit Merge:
- Make sure each block is its own chunk (don’t mix unrelated topics in the same block)
- Put your strongest or most complete draft first if you are preserving order
- If you are merging many drafts, consider Medium dedupe first, then adjust
Picking the Right Merge Mode (Simple, Dedupe, Structured, SEO)
Not every merge job is the same, so here is an easy way to choose.
Simple Merge
Use this when your blocks are already clean and you just want them combined in order. Minimal changes.
Good for: assembling sections you wrote yourself, transcripts, notes, outlines.
Merge + Remove Duplicates
Use this when you have overlap. Especially common with AI content, where every draft reintroduces the same definition.
Good for: merging two blog drafts, combining summaries, consolidating notes from multiple sources.
Structured Merge (Headings)
Best when your blocks are messy or out of order and you want a more readable result with sections.
Good for: long content, multi writer drafts, combining multiple outlines and partial drafts.
SEO Merge (Clean + Consistent)
This is the one you use when you are consolidating content for publishing. It focuses on readability and consistent terminology, without making up facts.
Good for: combining overlapping SEO drafts, refreshing an old article using multiple source drafts, consolidating category page copy.
If you are doing this regularly, it helps to keep the rest of your workflow tight too. Keyword research, brief creation, content cleanup. That is the kind of stuff we build at SEO Software, so you can go from messy inputs to something you can actually ship.
Duplicate Removal Strength: What “Low vs Medium vs High” Really Does
Dedupe is helpful, but it is easy to overdo.
- Low: removes exact duplicates only. Safe. Sometimes too gentle.
- Medium: removes near duplicates. Usually the sweet spot for AI draft overlap.
- High: aggressive. Can accidentally remove lines that are similar but still useful.
If you are merging SEO content, start at Medium and then skim the output once. You are mainly looking for any missing supporting points or a section that got shortened too much.
Common Use Cases (Real Ones, Not Just “Combine Text”)
Here are the scenarios where merging saves real time:
- Two AI drafts that both explain the same concept in different ways
- A blog post where intro and conclusion are written, but body sections exist in separate docs
- Multiple writers contributed sections, and now you need one consistent voice
- Landing page variants that share 70 percent of the same claims
- Research notes and bullet points that need to become a readable draft
- Old page copy plus updated snippets that you want to unify before editing
After You Merge, Do This Quick Quality Pass
It takes 30 seconds and prevents most “merged content” problems.
- Scan the first 10 lines: Are there repeated hooks or definitions?
- Search for repeated phrases: especially brand names, keyword definitions, and transition lines like “in conclusion”.
- Check consistency: one term per concept. Don’t switch between “customers” and “users” and “clients” randomly unless you mean it.
- Intent check: make sure the merged version still answers one clear intent. If it drifted, delete the off topic chunk.
Merging gives you a clean base. Editing is still where it becomes publish ready. But at least now you are editing one draft, not five.
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