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I’ve been looking for a blogging workflow that doesn’t eat my whole day in “admin mode.” So I gave RightBlogger a real test: I started with an article topic, generated a draft, ran the SEO checks it suggests, then pushed the post toward scheduling. What surprised me wasn’t just that it could write—it was how much of the boring back-and-forth it tries to handle for you.

RightBlogger Review
RightBlogger is built for bloggers and marketers who want to automate writing, SEO checks, and publishing—without bouncing between a dozen tabs. In my testing, the flow that worked best was: generate a draft first, then do a quick pass on SEO suggestions, and only after that worry about final edits and scheduling.
Does it replace a human editor? Not completely. I still had to tighten a few sentences and fix spots where the tone drifted slightly. But overall, it’s the kind of tool that reduces the “blank page + formatting + SEO checklist” grind. If you publish consistently, that time adds up fast.
Key Features
- AI Article Writer (long-form drafts)
I tested this by entering a keyword/topic and asking for a structured article. The output came back as a full draft (not just a paragraph or two). In practice, it’s best when you give it a clear angle (audience + goal), because otherwise you’ll get something that’s “correct” but a bit generic. Still, it got me from idea → usable outline/draft quickly. - Auto-blogging (scheduling + publishing)
This is where it starts feeling like an actual blogging tool, not just a writer. I connected it for publishing/scheduling and queued up a post to go out later. The biggest win here is that I didn’t have to copy/paste everything into my CMS at the last second. - Built-in SEO tools (keyword + on-page checks)
I used the SEO-related section after generating the draft. What I noticed: the tool flags basic on-page items and suggests tweaks, but it doesn’t magically guarantee ranking. You still need to make sure the headings, intro, and internal logic match the keyword intent. Think of it as a checklist + suggestions, not a substitute for SEO thinking. - AI-powered editor (rewrite, summarize, enhance)
The editor is handy when you don’t want to regenerate the whole article. I used it to shorten a few sections and rewrite some lines for clarity. It’s especially useful for “make this sound more like me” edits—though you’ll still want to read it end-to-end before publishing. - MyTone (train your writing style)
I didn’t just rely on default tone settings. I fed it a few sample writing pieces so it could mimic my style. The improvement wasn’t instant perfection, but it was noticeable—less robotic phrasing and more consistent voice across sections. - Over 80 AI tools
This is more than “write an article.” In my session, I used it for supporting tasks like tightening grammar and generating social post variations. The catch? With so many tools, it’s easy to get distracted. You’ll want a simple workflow so you don’t spend 45 minutes clicking around. - Integrations + automated formatting
Integrations are a big selling point, and they do help. However, I ran into a real limitation when exporting. When I exported the content and brought it into my CMS, some formatting didn’t carry over cleanly—certain spacing/line breaks looked different, and a couple of heading styles needed manual adjustment. If your site theme is picky, plan for a quick final formatting pass. - Supports 134 languages
If you write for multiple regions, this matters. I didn’t fully stress-test every language, but the feature is there and it’s useful for global content planning.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Time savings are real—especially for the “draft + SEO checklist + scheduling” portion of the workflow.
- Unlimited article generation on paid plans (no credit limits on those tiers). That’s a big deal if you iterate on drafts.
- Editor + rewrite tools mean you don’t always need to regenerate everything from scratch.
- MyTone helps with consistency once you train it with your samples.
- All-in-one approach covers writing, SEO basics, and publishing, so you spend less time toggling between tools.
- 30-day money-back guarantee gives you room to test without feeling locked in.
Cons
- You’ll still edit. AI drafts can miss nuance or slightly drift in tone, and you’ll want to proofread for accuracy.
- Learning curve. There are a lot of tools and options. If you want “press button, done,” this might feel like too much at first.
- Export formatting can be messy. In my case, exported content didn’t always preserve spacing/heading styling perfectly, so a quick cleanup in the CMS was still necessary.
- Setup takes some time. Training MyTone and getting your publishing workflow dialed in won’t be instant.
Pricing Plans
I checked the pricing structure while testing (and it’s worth verifying again on the checkout page, because promos can change). RightBlogger has three plans: Lite at $4.99/month billed annually (good for getting started), Pro at $15/month (unlimited content and more advanced features), and Business at $25/month (aimed at teams or multiple sites).
They also advertise a 50% discount on annual subscriptions. In my experience, the discount is usually only visible once you’re at checkout, so don’t assume it’s applied just because it’s mentioned on the pricing page.
Wrap up
RightBlogger is a strong fit if you publish regularly and want your workflow to be less manual—drafting, basic SEO checks, and scheduling/publishing in one place. I’d especially recommend it if you’re doing 3–5 posts per week (or more) and you like having automation handle the repetitive steps.
On the flip side, if you’re extremely picky about brand voice and you don’t want to train anything (or you need perfectly consistent export formatting every single time), you may find it a bit annoying. You’ll still be doing human edits and a final formatting pass.
For me, the biggest value was not “AI writing exists”—it was how much of the end-to-end publishing process it tries to cover. If that’s what you need, it’s worth giving a shot.



