Content Risk Score Tool
Check whether your content topic is normal, YMYL, sensitive, or high risk.
How to use Content Risk Score Tool properly
Content Risk Score Tool helps you check how careful you should be before writing or publishing a topic. It is useful when you are planning articles, tool pages, landing pages, newsletters, or short website content and you want to know whether the topic is simple, sensitive, or needs stronger review. The tool does not stop you from writing about any topic. It helps you understand what type of care the topic may need before it goes live.
Start by entering one clear topic in the box above. You can paste a keyword, article title, content idea, niche name, or short description. For better results, keep the input focused. For example, instead of writing a full paragraph, enter a topic like “home loan EMI planning,” “credit card debt tips,” “medical symptom advice,” or “online income claims.” A clean topic makes the risk signal easier to understand.
What type of topics should be checked
Use this tool when your content may affect money decisions, health choices, legal understanding, safety, employment, education, personal data, or public trust. Topics such as loans, insurance, investing, medical symptoms, taxes, immigration, gambling, debt, earning claims, and product performance need extra care. Normal topics such as writing tips, simple productivity ideas, basic tutorials, or general website planning may still need editing, but they usually carry lower publishing risk.
How to use the score after checking
If the result looks low risk, you can continue with a normal content plan, but still keep the writing helpful and accurate. If the result looks medium or high risk, slow down before publishing. Add official references where possible, avoid guaranteed outcomes, explain who the content is for, and make the limits clear. A high-risk topic should not sound like direct personal advice. It should guide readers with general information and encourage them to verify important decisions.
Best workflow for safer publishing
After checking the topic, create a short content plan. Decide the main purpose, reader intent, sources needed, risky words to avoid, and disclaimer placement. Then write the page in a balanced way. Before publishing, read the final version once as a beginner and once as a reviewer. If any line sounds like a promise, diagnosis, legal instruction, guaranteed income claim, or final decision for every reader, rewrite it with clearer conditions and safer language.