Zero Signup ToolsFree browser tools

SEO Tools

RSS Feed Parser

Paste an RSS 2.0, Atom 1.0, or RSS 1.0 feed and extract every item with title, link, date, author, and categories in your browser.

0 chars
Or load a sample

Parsing runs entirely in your browser. No network requests are made, so private or staging feeds can be inspected safely.

How to use

  1. Paste the raw XML of an RSS 2.0, Atom 1.0, or RSS 1.0 feed into the left panel, or click a sample button to load an example feed.
  2. The right panel shows the detected feed type, channel-level title and description, site link, language, last updated date, and any structure warnings.
  3. Use the Filter box to narrow the items table by title, link, author, description, or category, and use the Sort dropdown to reorder by date or title.
  4. Copy the plain URL list, CSV, or JSON export block to move the parsed items into a spreadsheet, audit script, or content backlog.
  5. Click any item link to open the source page, or use the per-row Copy link button to grab the URL without leaving the page.

About this tool

RSS Feed Parser reads the three feed formats publishers ship today: RSS 2.0 (the format most blogs, podcasts, and news sites use), Atom 1.0 (the format many static site generators and Google products emit), and the older RSS 1.0 / RDF format that still appears in archives and library feeds. Paste the raw XML and the tool reports the feed type, channel-level metadata (title, site link, description, language, last updated date, generator, rights) and every item or entry with its title, link, publication date, author, GUID or id, and any category or subject tags. Items can be filtered by free-text query (matching title, link, author, description, and categories) and sorted by feed order, newest first, oldest first, or alphabetically by title. The result table links every item to its canonical URL and shows category chips inline. Three export blocks let you copy a plain newline-separated URL list (for crawlers, redirect maps, or backlinks audits), a CSV of every item (for spreadsheets and content audits), or a structured JSON dump (for scripts that need the whole feed in one object). Parsing runs entirely in your browser with the native DOMParser. No network requests are made, so you can inspect private staging feeds, draft feeds, or competitor feeds you have pasted in without sending the contents to a server. The parser is tolerant of CDATA sections, mixed HTML inside descriptions, Dublin Core extension elements (dc:creator, dc:date, dc:subject), and content:encoded fields, and it surfaces warnings when required channel-level elements are missing rather than failing silently.

Free to use. Works in your browser. No signup, no login.

Related tools

You may also like

All tools
All toolsSEO Tools