Any idea into an X thread
Paste a rough idea, a blog post, or a transcript — get a clean thread with a real hook, one idea per tweet, each under 280. Copy and post.
Your thread appears here — hook first, one idea per tweet, each under 280.
A thread lives or dies on two things: the hook and the pacing. If the first tweet doesn't promise a payoff, no one taps "show more." And if the middle drags — two ideas crammed into one tweet, or a tweet that doesn't pull you to the next — people drop off halfway.
This tool handles both. It opens with a specific, scroll-stopping hook (no "a thread 🧵"), then breaks your material into one clear idea per tweet, each paced to make you want the next. It keeps the real substance from your source and cuts the filler, so a rambling transcript or a long blog post becomes something tight enough to actually finish.
Every tweet shows a live character count so nothing sneaks over 280, and the last one lands the point — or adds a light, earned call to action rather than a hard sell. Paste, pick a length, copy, post.
How does the thread maker work?+
Paste any source — a rough idea, a blog post, a podcast transcript — pick a length, and Claude turns it into a thread: a scroll-stopping hook, one clear idea per tweet, each under 280 characters, ending on the point or a light call to action.
Is it free?+
Yes — make as many threads as you want, no signup. Each tweet has a live character count and a copy button, plus a 'copy all' so you can paste the whole thread into X.
Will every tweet fit X's 280-character limit?+
It's instructed to keep each tweet under 280, and the tool shows a live count on every tweet so you can spot and trim anything that runs long before posting.
Can I turn a blog post into a thread?+
That's exactly what it's for. Paste the post (up to a few thousand words) and it pulls out the real substance, keeps the strongest points, and paces them across tweets — no filler.
Write the thread, or let an agent run the whole account.
X-Autopilot writes posts and threads in your voice, replies to the right people, and posts on your schedule — running on your Mac while you build.
Try X-Autopilot free▶