Let me be direct Untapped.
The keywords everyone else is targeting? They’re tapped out. Forbes, NerdWallet, and every major blog in your niche have already written the “best X” and “how to Y” posts. You’re not going to outrank them anytime soon.
But here’s what they’re missing: the keywords they haven’t thought of yet. The weird, specific, question-based phrases that real people type into Google every single day.
I’ve built an entire website around untapped keywords. Zero backlinks. Zero domain authority. Yet I’m getting 5,000+ monthly visitors from keywords my competitors ignore.
This guide shows you exactly how to find those keywords in 2026. No expensive tools required. Just strategies that work.
What Makes a Keyword “Untapped”?
| Characteristic | What It Means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Low competition | No major sites targeting it | “best credit cards for students with no job” |
| Specific intent | User knows exactly what they want | “how to freeze your credit report after identity theft” |
| Question-based | Starts with who, what, where, when, why, how | “why does my credit score drop after paying off debt” |
| Contains a modifier | Includes words like “for,” “without,” “vs,” “cheap” | “budgeting apps for couples with irregular income” |
| Local or niche-specific | Targets a specific audience or location | “best student credit cards in India 2026” |
The test: If you can find a major site that has written an article targeting the exact phrase, it’s not untapped.
Strategy 1: The “Question Explosion” Method
Most bloggers target keywords. Smart bloggers target questions.
Why questions are untapped: Big sites write broad “how to budget” posts. They rarely answer hyper-specific questions like “how to budget when your income changes every month.”
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Go to AnswerThePublic (free tier)
Step 2: Enter your seed keyword (e.g., “budgeting”)
Step 3: Look at the “questions” section (who, what, where, when, why, how)
Step 4: Find the most specific, weird questions
Step 5: Write those down
Real examples from “budgeting”:
| Generic (Tapped) | Untapped Question |
|---|---|
| how to budget | how to budget when you get paid weekly |
| budgeting tips | budgeting tips for single parents with two jobs |
| best budgeting apps | best budgeting apps for couples who don’t share accounts |
Step 6: Google the question. If the top results are forums (Reddit, Quora) or no direct answer, you’ve found an untapped keyword.
Strategy 2: The Reddit “Pain Point” Mine
Reddit is where people ask questions they can’t answer on Google. These are your untapped keywords.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Go to Reddit.com
Step 2: Search “site:reddit.com [your topic]”
Step 3: Sort by “new” or “top of past month”
Step 4: Look for posts that are questions
Step 5: Copy the exact phrasing of the question
Real examples from r/personalfinance:
| Generic Keyword | Reddit Question (Untapped) |
|---|---|
| credit card debt | “how to pay off credit card debt when you have no savings and a low credit score” |
| emergency fund | “should I use my emergency fund to pay off debt or keep it for job loss” |
| investing for beginners | “where should I invest $500 as a college student with no investment knowledge” |
Why this works: Redditors type exactly what they’re searching. If they ask it on Reddit, they’ve probably typed it into Google too.
Pro tip: Look for posts with high upvotes but few comments. That means lots of people have the same question, but no one has answered it well.
Strategy 3: The Google Autocomplete “Alphabet” Deep Dive
You’ve probably used autocomplete before. But you haven’t used it like this.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Type your seed keyword into Google
Step 2: Add a space and the letter “a”
Step 3: Write down every suggestion
Step 4: Repeat for “b,” “c,” “d”… all the way to “z”
Step 5: Then add a space and a question word (who, what, where, when, why, how)
Step 6: Repeat the alphabet for each question word
Example for “credit cards”:
| Seed + Letter | Autocomplete Suggestions |
|---|---|
| credit cards a | credit cards for bad credit, credit cards for students, credit cards for beginners |
| credit cards b | credit cards best for travel, credit cards balance transfer |
| credit cards c | credit cards cash back, credit cards for fair credit |
| credit cards how | how to get a credit card with no credit history |
| credit cards why | why was my credit card application denied |
Each suggestion is a keyword someone is actually searching. Many are untapped.
Strategy 4: The “People Also Ask” Rabbit Hole
Most bloggers look at the first level of “People Also Ask” and stop. The untapped keywords are 3-4 levels deep.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Search your seed keyword
Step 2: Scroll to “People also ask”
Step 3: Click the first question. New questions appear.
Step 4: Click a new question. More appear.
Step 5: Keep going 4-5 levels deep
Step 6: Write down every question
Real example for “saving money”:
| Level | Question |
|---|---|
| 1 | How can I save money fast? |
| 2 | How can I save money on a low income? |
| 3 | How can I save money when I live paycheck to paycheck? |
| 4 | How can I save money with no savings and high rent? |
| 5 | How can I save money when my expenses are higher than my income? |
Level 5 is the untapped keyword. No one has answered it well. That’s your opportunity.
Strategy 5: The “vs” and “without” Gap
Two of the most powerful modifiers for finding untapped keywords: “vs” and “without.”
Why they work:
- “vs” keywords help people make decisions (high commercial intent)
- “without” keywords solve problems (people have constraints)
“Vs” keywords to target:
| Tapped | Untapped |
|---|---|
| budgeting app vs spreadsheet | YNAB vs EveryDollar for couples with variable income |
| credit card vs debit card | secured credit card vs prepaid card for rebuilding credit |
| term insurance vs whole life | term insurance vs ULIP for tax saving in India |
“Without” keywords to target:
| Tapped | Untapped |
|---|---|
| how to save money | how to save money without a budget |
| how to invest | how to invest without a broker in India |
| how to build credit | how to build credit without a credit card |
How to find them: Type “[topic] vs” or “[topic] without” into Google and see what autocomplete suggests.
Strategy 6: The “SERP Gap” Method (Using Free Tools)
Most people think you need expensive tools for gap analysis. You don’t.
Step-by-step (using Ubersuggest free tier):
Step 1: Go to Ubersuggest
Step 2: Enter a competitor’s URL (a smaller blog in your niche, not Forbes)
Step 3: Click “Top Keywords”
Step 4: Sort by “Volume” (low to high)
Step 5: Look for keywords with low SEO difficulty (under 30)
Step 6: Check if your competitor’s content is thin (under 1,000 words, no examples)
Step 7: Those are your untapped keywords. Create a better version.
Without any tool: Search a broad keyword. Scroll to page 5-10. Look at the domains ranking there. They’re not giants. Target the keywords they’re ranking for.
Strategy 7: The “YouTube Comments” Goldmine
People ask hyper-specific questions in YouTube comments. Those questions are untapped keywords.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Find a popular YouTube video in your niche
Step 2: Scroll to the comments section
Step 3: Sort by “Newest” (not top comments)
Step 4: Look for comments that are questions
Step 5: Write down the exact phrasing
Real examples from a budgeting video:
| Comment Question | Untapped Keyword |
|---|---|
| “What if I get paid every week instead of every month?” | how to budget with weekly paychecks |
| “How do I budget for irregular income from freelancing?” | budgeting for freelancers with variable income |
| “What about saving for a wedding while paying student loans?” | how to save for a wedding while paying off debt |
Each comment is a person with a specific problem. Answer it on your blog.
Strategy 8: The “Amazon Question” Hack
Amazon product pages have a “Customer Questions & Answers” section. These are commercial intent questions from real buyers.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Go to Amazon.com
Step 2: Search for a product in your niche
Step 3: Scroll to “Customer Questions & Answers”
Step 4: Read the questions
Step 5: Write down questions that aren’t answered well
Example from a standing desk product:
| Question | Untapped Keyword |
|---|---|
| “Will this desk fit a 32-inch monitor and a laptop?” | best standing desk for dual monitor setup |
| “Is this easy to assemble for someone with no tools?” | standing desk assembly without tools |
Why this works: These questions come from people ready to buy. High commercial intent. Low competition.
Strategy 9: The “Google Images” Secret
Google Images has its own autocomplete and related searches. Most SEOs ignore it.
Step-by-step:
Step 1: Go to Google Images
Step 2: Type your seed keyword
Step 3: Look at the autocomplete suggestions
Step 4: Scroll to the bottom of the image results
Step 5: Look at “Related searches”
Why this works: Image searchers are often looking for tutorials, diagrams, and visual explanations. These are untapped informational keywords.
Strategy 10: The “Forum Question” Compilation
Forums are where real people ask real questions. No SEO optimization. No keyword research. Just raw intent.
Forums to mine:
| Forum | Best For |
|---|---|
| Everything | |
| Quora | Professional and educational topics |
| Stack Exchange | Technical and programming questions |
| Facebook Groups | Local and niche communities |
| X (Twitter) | Trending and time-sensitive questions |
How to mine efficiently:
- Search “site:reddit.com [your topic] [question mark]”
- Or use Reddit’s search with “self:yes” (shows only text posts)
- Sort by “relevance” or “top of past month”
- Copy-paste questions into a spreadsheet
The “Untapped Keyword” Checklist
Before you write for a keyword, run it through this checklist:
- No major site (Forbes, NerdWallet, etc.) has a post targeting the exact phrase
- The top 3 results are forums (Reddit, Quora) or small blogs
- The keyword is 4+ words long (long-tail)
- It’s a question (who, what, where, when, why, how) or contains a modifier (vs, without, for)
- You can write a genuinely helpful, thorough answer (1,500+ words)
- You have personal experience or a unique angle
If you checked all 6 boxes, write the post.
Real Case Study: 3,000 Visitors from One Untapped Keyword
The keyword: “how to save money on groceries when you have dietary restrictions”
Source: Reddit question with 200+ upvotes
Competition check: No major site had a dedicated post
What I wrote:
- 2,500-word guide
- Specific examples for gluten-free, dairy-free, vegan, keto
- Personal story (my sister has celiac disease)
- Downloadable substitution checklist
- 15 internal links to related posts
Results (90 days later):
- #1 ranking for the target keyword
- 3,200 monthly visitors from that post alone
- 40+ related keywords (all untapped) now ranking
The keyword tools said “zero search volume.” Google said otherwise.
Common Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
| Mistake | Why It Fails | The Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Targeting fake questions | No one is actually searching | Verify on Reddit/Quora first |
| Writing thin content (under 1,000 words) | Doesn’t fully answer the question | Aim for 1,500-2,500 words |
| No internal links | Google can’t find related content | Link between related posts |
| Ignoring Search Console | You miss expansion keywords | Check monthly for new queries |
| Not updating old posts | Answers become outdated | Refresh every 6-12 months |
Your 30-Day Untapped Keyword Plan
| Week | Focus | Action |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Discovery | Use all 10 strategies. Find 50 untapped keywords. |
| 2 | Validation | Check each keyword. Is there a major site targeting it? |
| 3 | Creation | Write 5-10 posts targeting your best keywords. |
| 4 | Linking | Link posts together. Submit to Google Search Console. |
Goal by Day 30: 5-10 posts targeting untapped keywords. Wait 30-90 days. Watch traffic grow.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. What’s the difference between untapped and long-tail keywords?
Long-tail keywords have low search volume (10-100/month). Untapped keywords have zero reported volume but real traffic. Untapped is a subset of long-tail.
2. How many untapped keywords should I target?
As many as you can. Create one post per keyword. Link them together. Build a cluster around a topic.
3. Can I monetize untapped keywords?
Yes. Often better than broad keywords because intent is higher. Someone searching “best credit card for a student with no credit” is closer to applying than someone searching “credit cards.”
4. What’s the best free tool for finding untapped keywords?
Google Autocomplete + Reddit + AnswerThePublic free tier. No paid tools needed.
5. How long does it take to rank for untapped keywords?
30-90 days. Faster than competitive keywords because there’s no competition.
6. Can I use AI to write for untapped keywords?
Yes, but edit heavily. Add personal experience. Answer the specific question thoroughly. Generic AI content won’t rank.
7. What if I can’t find any untapped keywords in my niche?
Go narrower. Instead of “personal finance,” go “personal finance for college students in India.” Instead of “college students,” go “engineering students with part-time jobs.” There’s always a narrower angle.
Final Thoughts
The keywords everyone else is fighting over? Let them have it.
The untapped keywords are hiding in plain sight. In Reddit questions. In YouTube comments. In the 5th level of “People Also Ask.” In autocomplete suggestions your competitors scroll past.
They’re not hard to find. You just need to know where to look.
Use the strategies in this guide. Build a spreadsheet of 50-100 untapped keywords. Write one post per keyword. Link them together. Wait 90 days.
Your traffic will come from keywords no one else bothered to target. And that’s how you win.
What’s the most specific, weird keyword you can think of in your niche? Drop a comment below.