GrowthBar vs Keyword Keg in 2026: AI content pipeline vs a keyword tool mid-migration
GrowthBar writes the post for you from a SERP scan. Keyword Keg pulled suggestions from 11 autosuggest APIs, but it is being folded into Keywords Everywhere and no longer takes new standalone sign-ups.
Keyword Keg is actively being migrated into Keywords Everywhere, with its pricing page no longer active and new sign-ups redirected. GrowthBar has no such transition risk.
Keyword Keg pulled suggestions from 11 autosuggest APIs including Amazon, eBay, and Wikipedia. GrowthBar's keyword research draws from a single 7-billion-term database rather than live multi-platform autosuggest.
GrowthBar generates full AI-written drafts via its 2-minute blog builder. Keyword Keg had no content generation capability at any point in its lifecycle.
Keyword Keg supported bulk upload of up to 500,000 keywords with metrics appended in one pass, well beyond what GrowthBar's keyword research workflow is built to process at once.
Keyword Keg offered white-label CSV, Excel, and PDF export across its tool suite. GrowthBar restricts white-label reporting to its $149.25/month Agency tier.
GrowthBar was acquired by SEOptimer and is mid-merger too, so buyers get roadmap uncertainty on both sides of this comparison, just at different stages.
This comparison has an unusual wrinkle: Keyword Keg is actively being migrated into Keywords Everywhere, its pricing page is no longer accessible, and new users are redirected elsewhere. That makes GrowthBar the more stable option by default for anyone signing up today, but it is worth understanding what Keyword Keg did well before it goes away as a standalone product. GrowthBar pairs keyword research with an AI writer that drafts full posts from a SERP scan. Keyword Keg's strength was breadth of source data, pulling suggestions from 11 autosuggest APIs across Google, YouTube, Amazon, and more, plus a 500,000-row bulk upload capacity that few tools in this category match. Neither wrote content, and Keyword Keg still does not, since it never had that function.
The tools at a glance
GrowthBar
AI SEO writing tool that turns a live SERP scan into a published draft in under two minutes
GrowthBar's workflow starts with a target keyword, scans the live Google results, builds an outline from what is actually ranking, and then its AI writes a complete draft against that structure. The keyword research behind it draws on 7 billion suggestions with difficulty scores and revenue estimates, so the starting keyword is grounded in data rather than a guess.
Competitor analysis adds backlink and ad data for the same term, and custom AI models let you train the writer on your own content so drafts need less editing over time. The Chrome extension and WordPress integration keep the whole loop inside an existing publishing setup rather than requiring a separate export-import step.
GrowthBar does not pull suggestions from multiple autosuggest sources the way a dedicated discovery tool does, and it has no bulk upload for large existing keyword lists. It is optimized for going from one target keyword to one published draft, not for processing keyword sets at the scale Keyword Keg was built for.
| Feature | Standard $36/month | Pro $74.25/month | Agency $149.25/month |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI blog drafts (2-minute builder) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| SERP-based outlines | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Keyword research (7B suggestions) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Competitor analysis | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Custom AI models | No | Yes | Yes |
| White-label reports | No | No | Yes |
Keyword Keg
Five-tool keyword suite built on 11 autosuggest APIs, now being folded into Keywords Everywhere
Keyword Keg's defining feature was breadth: it pulled keyword suggestions from 11 autosuggest APIs at once, covering Google, YouTube, Bing, Yahoo, Yandex, Amazon, eBay, Alibaba, Wikipedia, Ask.com, and Google Play. For e-commerce teams researching both Google and Amazon in one pass, or teams wanting Wikipedia and YouTube alongside standard search data, that source coverage was hard to match.
The bulk import tool could take a CSV or Excel file of up to 500,000 keywords and return it with volume, CPC, competition, and trend data appended, which is one of the largest bulk processing limits in the category. Automatic intent categorization sorted keywords into Buyer Intent, Product Info, Questions, and other funnel-stage buckets, and white-label CSV, Excel, and PDF export made it usable for agency deliverables.
As of mid-2026, none of that is available to new customers in the traditional sense. Keyword Keg is being consolidated into Keywords Everywhere, developed by the same team, and its pricing page is no longer active. Existing users are supported through the transition, but anyone evaluating tools today is really evaluating Keywords Everywhere, not Keyword Keg as a standalone product.
| Feature | Migration to Keywords Everywhere See keywordseverywhere.com |
|---|---|
| Bulk upload up to 500K keywords | Yes |
| 11 autosuggest APIs | Yes |
| Intent categorization | Yes |
| White-label export | Yes |
| Standalone pricing page active | No |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Core function | Keyword-to-draft content pipeline | Multi-source keyword discovery and bulk enrichment |
| Keyword source breadth | Single database (7B keyword suggestions) | 11 autosuggest APIs (Google, YouTube, Amazon, eBay, Wikipedia, and more) |
| AI content drafting | Yes (2-minute blog builder) | No |
| Bulk keyword processing | Limited (single seed keyword expansion) | Yes (up to 500,000 keywords per upload) |
| Intent categorization | No (difficulty score + revenue estimate only) | Yes (Buyer Intent, Product Info, Questions, and more) |
| White-label export | Agency tier only | Yes (CSV, Excel, PDF) |
| Standalone product status | Standalone, mid-merger with SEOptimer | Being migrated into Keywords Everywhere; not open to new standalone sign-ups |
| Starting price | $36/mo | No longer published |
Which should you choose?
This is not really a fair fight in the traditional sense, because one side of it is being discontinued as a standalone product. Keyword Keg's 11-API breadth and 500,000-row bulk upload were genuinely strong, stronger in scope than anything GrowthBar offers on the discovery side, but that capability is only accessible today by going to Keywords Everywhere instead. GrowthBar, despite its own SEOptimer acquisition, is still taking new customers and publishing pricing normally. If you are choosing where to start fresh, the migration status settles the question before feature depth even comes into play.
Bottom line
New users should sign up for GrowthBar if the priority is an AI-assisted content pipeline, or go to Keywords Everywhere directly if the priority is Keyword Keg's multi-source discovery and bulk processing, since that is where the underlying technology now lives. Keyword Keg itself is not a sensible option to evaluate fresh in 2026 given its pricing page is down and new sign-ups are being redirected.
Frequently asked questions
Can I still sign up for Keyword Keg as a new customer in 2026?
Not in the traditional sense. Keyword Keg's pricing page is no longer accessible and new sign-ups are being redirected to Keywords Everywhere, which is developed by the same team and is absorbing Keyword Keg's functionality.
Does GrowthBar pull keyword suggestions from Amazon or YouTube like Keyword Keg did?
No, GrowthBar's keyword research draws from its own 7-billion-term database rather than live autosuggest data from other platforms. Keyword Keg's 11-API approach, which included Amazon, eBay, and YouTube, is the kind of multi-platform breadth GrowthBar does not attempt to replicate.
Is GrowthBar a safe long-term choice given its own SEOptimer acquisition?
GrowthBar continues to operate as a standalone product with active, published pricing even after being acquired by SEOptimer, which puts it in a more stable position than Keyword Keg right now. The roadmap uncertainty is real but it is not the same as Keyword Keg's situation, where new sign-ups are already being turned away.
What happened to Keyword Keg's bulk upload feature for large keyword lists?
That capability, which handled up to 500,000 keywords per upload, is being carried over into Keywords Everywhere as part of the migration. It was never something GrowthBar offered, since GrowthBar's keyword research is built around expanding a single seed term rather than enriching an existing bulk list.
Which tool is better for a team that wants both keyword research and AI-written content?
GrowthBar is the only one of the two with content generation built in, producing full drafts through its 2-minute blog builder. Keyword Keg, even before its migration, never had a writing feature, so it was always paired with a separate content tool.

