Advance Google Search is a free online tool that helps you build precise Google queries using advanced search operators — without memorizing any syntax. Fill in the fields above and the tool constructs the exact query for you, shows a live preview, and opens the results in Google with one click.
Google supports dozens of special operators like site:, filetype:, intitle: and inurl: that dramatically narrow search results. Most people never use them because the syntax is hard to remember. This tool puts every useful operator behind a simple form so anyone can search like a pro — students finding research papers, job seekers targeting company career pages, SEO professionals auditing sites, or anyone tired of scrolling through irrelevant results.
What are Google search operators?
Search operators are special commands you add to a Google query to filter results. For example, site:wikipedia.org nepal shows only Wikipedia pages about Nepal, while filetype:pdf tax nepal returns only PDF files about tax in Nepal. This tool supports the most useful operators:
| Operator | What it does | Example |
|---|
"…" | Exact phrase match — results must contain the words in that exact order | "preeti to unicode" |
-word | Exclude — removes results containing that word | python -snake |
site: | Limit to one website or domain | site:gov.np tender |
filetype: | Only show a specific file format | filetype:pdf annual report |
intitle: | Word must appear in the page title | intitle:scholarship nepal |
inurl: | Word must appear in the page URL | inurl:careers software |
How to use this tool
1. Search Words — type the main keywords you are looking for.
2. Exact Phrase — enter a phrase that must appear word-for-word in the results (the tool wraps it in quotes automatically).
3. Exclude Words — type words you want to remove from results (each word gets a - prefix automatically).
4. Use the Site, File Type, In Title and In URL fields to add operators.
5. Optionally filter by Time (past 24 hours, week, month or year) and Region (Nepal, India, USA, UK, Australia).
6. Watch the live query preview update as you fill fields — copy it or click Search Google to open results in a new tab.
Everything runs in your browser — nothing you enter is sent to or stored on any server.
When is advance Google search useful?
Students & researchers — find PDF textbooks, research papers or course material from university sites: set File Type to PDF and Site to .edu or .edu.np.
Job seekers — search career pages of specific companies: use site:company.com with inurl:careers.
SEO professionals — audit indexed pages, check title tags and find backlink sources by combining site, intitle and exclude operators.
Journalists & fact-checkers — locate government documents, press releases or statistics by filtering to .gov.np with exact phrases.
Everyday users — find that recipe without all the blog filler, locate specific forum threads, or filter out shopping results when you just want information.
Use it together with our other free tools
Type Nepali text with the Preeti to Unicode converter, write Nepali by typing English with Roman Typing, extract text from images with the OCR tool, or browse everything on the Tools page.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is the difference between normal Google search and advance Google search?
Normal Google search matches your keywords broadly. Advance Google search uses special operators like site:, filetype:, intitle: and exact-phrase quotes to filter results precisely — so you find exactly what you need instead of scrolling through pages of irrelevant links.
Do I need a Google account to use this?
No. This tool builds a query string and opens it in Google — you don't need to log in or create any account. The tool itself is completely free and works in any browser.
Can I combine multiple operators in one search?
Yes — that is the main purpose of this tool. You can combine exact phrase, site, file type, title and exclude filters all at once. For example: searching for PDFs about scholarships on government sites, excluding expired ones.
What does the Exclude Words field do?
It adds a minus sign (-) before each word you enter, telling Google to remove any result that contains those words. For example, typing "download install" in Exclude Words removes pages about downloading or installing.
Does this tool store my searches?
No. Everything runs entirely in your browser. Your search terms are never sent to our server — the query is built locally and sent directly to Google when you click Search.