TikTok hashtag generator
Use this free TikTok hashtag generator to turn your niche, product, and content type into a ready-to-post set of 12 to 15 hashtags. Every set is split into broad, niche, and specific tiers, so you get reach and relevance instead of a random block of tags.
Generate a hashtag set
Runs in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.
One keyword becomes a specific tag so buyers searching it can find you.
Show the product doing its job.
The classic three-tier spread most posts should use.
Broad reach
3 tagsHigh-volume tags that put you in front of the widest audience.
Niche
6 tagsCategory tags that reach people already interested in your space.
Micro / specific
5 tagsNarrow tags that reach a small, high-intent audience close to buying.
#productreview #trending #skincareroutine #tiktokmademebuyit #kbeauty #acnetreatment #skincaretips #beautyhacks #skintok #fungalacnesafe #niacinamide #retinolroutine #doublecleansing #sensitiveskincare
From a niche to a posting-ready hashtag set
Pick your niche, and the generator pulls from a hand-curated pool of hashtags for that space instead of scraping whatever is trending this minute. Add an optional product keyword and it becomes a specific tag, so someone searching that exact phrase can land on your post. Choose a content type, and the set picks up the format tags that match a product showcase, a slideshow, a behind-the-scenes clip, or an educational post.
The hashtag mix control decides how the set is weighted. The balanced mix is the classic three-tier spread that most posts should use. Lean broad when an account is brand new and needs reach, or lean specific when you would rather reach a smaller, warmer audience that is closer to buying. Whatever you pick, the tool keeps the total in the sweet spot of 12 to 15 tags.
Press regenerate to rotate through fresh curated variations for the same inputs, then copy the whole set with one tap or copy any single tag on its own. Everything runs in your browser, so nothing you type is uploaded anywhere.
The three-tier hashtag strategy
The reason a good set beats a random pile of tags is balance. Each tier does a different job, and using all three at once is what gives a small business both reach and relevance. Here is what each tier is for and why the mix keeps the proportions it does.
Broad reach
Broad tags like the ones every business reaches for are huge and fiercely competitive, so they rarely rank your post on their own. Used in small numbers they widen the pool of people the post can surface to, which is why the mix keeps only a couple of them.
Niche
Niche tags name your actual category, so they reach people who already follow that space and are primed for what you sell. This is the heart of the set: relevant enough to attract the right viewer, broad enough to still carry meaningful volume. Most of your tags should live here.
Micro / specific
Micro tags are specific and low-competition, so a well-made post can actually stand out under them. They reach a smaller, warmer audience that is closer to buying, and they are where a specific product keyword belongs. A few of these give the algorithm a precise signal about who you are for.
Why relevance beats volume for a small business
It is tempting to reach for the biggest hashtags you can find, but for a small account they usually do more harm than good. A tag with enormous volume buries your post under thousands of others within seconds, and TikTok has little reason to pick yours out. The tags that actually move a small business are the specific ones, where a genuinely good post can stand out and reach people who are close to buying.
The other half of the job is honesty. Every tag you add tells TikTok who your post is for, so a tag that does not match your content sends the wrong people, who scroll past, which teaches the algorithm your post is weak. Keep the set true to what the video or slideshow actually shows. If you want to sharpen the words on the post itself, the hook generator helps you write a first line that earns the view your hashtags bought, and our guide to the best TikTok hashtags goes deeper on building sets that last. For what is moving right now, see trending TikTok hashtags this week.
Turn a product URL into TikTok slideshows
Hashtags get people to the post. The post still has to deliver. Point CineRads at your website and it writes the hook slide, the proof slides, and the call to action as a finished slideshow you can post and tag. Your first three are free.
Frequently asked questions
How many hashtags should I use on TikTok?
For a small business, a focused set of about 12 to 15 hashtags works better than cramming in every tag you can think of. TikTok reads your caption and hashtags to decide who should see the post, so a tight, relevant set gives a clearer signal than a wall of generic tags. This generator returns 12 to 15 by default, already split into broad, niche, and specific tiers so the mix is balanced for you.
What is the three-tier hashtag strategy?
The three-tier strategy mixes a few broad reach tags, several niche tags, and a few micro or specific tags. Broad tags are high-volume and competitive, so they add reach but rarely rank you alone. Niche tags describe your category and reach people already interested in it. Specific tags are narrow and low-competition, so they reach a small, high-intent audience that is closer to buying. Using all three gives you both reach and relevance instead of betting everything on one type.
Do these hashtags show live view counts?
No, and that is on purpose. Live hashtag view counts change constantly and no static tool can know them accurately, so this generator labels tags by qualitative tier instead. Broad tags are the highest-volume and most competitive, specific tags are the narrowest and least competitive, and niche tags sit in between. Treat the tiers as a relative guide, then check current activity inside TikTok search before you lean hard on any single tag.
Are these TikTok hashtags free to use?
Yes. The generator is free and every hashtag it returns is yours to copy and post. Use the copy-all button to grab the whole set, or tap any single tag to copy it on its own. Swap in tags that match your exact product, and drop any that do not genuinely describe your content, because an irrelevant tag can hurt more than it helps.
Should I put hashtags in the caption or the comments?
Put them in the caption. TikTok uses the caption and its hashtags to understand and categorize your post, and hashtags added later in a comment do not carry the same weight. Keep the caption readable: lead with a short line for a human, then add your hashtag set after it rather than burying the message under tags.
How often should I change my hashtags?
Vary them post to post rather than pasting the same block every time. Keep two or three anchor tags that always describe your brand and category, then rotate the rest to match each specific video or slideshow. Press regenerate in this tool to get a fresh rotation of curated variations for the same niche, which makes it easy to keep the set relevant without starting from scratch.