The Nostr post generator from Postiz drafts ready-to-broadcast notes for the decentralized social protocol without forcing you to stare at a blank relay client. Paste a topic, a link, or a rough bullet list, pick whether you want a quick kind 1 short note or a long-form NIP-23 article, and the AI returns plain-text copy that fits how Nostr actually reads. No proprietary formatting, no hidden tracking parameters, no Markdown soup that breaks on half the clients. Just clean text, the right hashtag density, and a tone that matches the sovereign, Bitcoin-native culture of the network.
Nostr rewards people who publish consistently across relays, but consistency is hard when every note has to be written from scratch in a client that does not offer drafts, scheduling, or cross-posting. The Nostr post generator closes that gap. It acts like a co-writer that understands npub identity, zap incentives, and the difference between a short note and a long-form article, so you can move from idea to signed event in under a minute and spend the rest of your time engaging with replies and zaps instead of wrestling with copy.
What the Nostr post generator does
The tool accepts any input you have lying around: a blog post URL, a podcast transcript, a thread from another network, a product update, or a single sentence describing what you want to say. It parses the intent, classifies the best Nostr format for the message, and returns a draft you can copy into Damus, Amethyst, Primal, Coracle, Snort, or any other client. Because Nostr is an open protocol, the output is portable by default. Nothing locks you into a single relay or app.
Under the hood, the generator is tuned on how Nostr notes actually perform. It keeps short notes under the length where clients start truncating, front-loads the hook so the first line carries the note in feed previews, and uses lowercase hashtags because Nostr tag indexing is case-sensitive and the ecosystem has standardized on lowercase. It avoids emoji spam, avoids engagement-bait questions that read as cringe on a protocol that values signal, and keeps links naked rather than wrapped in shorteners that relay operators sometimes strip.
Nostr post types you can generate
Short notes (kind 1 hook)
Kind 1 is the bread and butter of Nostr: a short text note, usually one to three sentences, that shows up in the main feed of every major client. The generator writes kind 1 notes that open with a concrete claim or a pointed observation, then land a single payoff line. It avoids filler like “thoughts?” or “what do you think?” because on Nostr those read as performative. Use this format for quick takes, link drops, build-in-public updates, and lightning-fast reactions to news.
Threaded note sequences
For longer arguments that still belong in the feed, the generator can produce a reply-chained thread. Each note stands alone, each one ends on a hook that pulls the reader into the next, and the final note lands the conclusion with a clear call to action. Threads on Nostr are stitched together through e-tags, so the output is designed to be pasted in order without losing context even if a middle note fails to propagate to every relay.
NIP-23 long-form articles (kind 30023)
When the idea needs more than a thread, the generator drafts a NIP-23 long-form article. Kind 30023 is the Nostr equivalent of a blog post: a replaceable event with a title, summary, image, and Markdown body. The tool returns a title under sixty characters, a summary that works as a meta description, a suggested header image prompt, and a body that uses only the Markdown subset NIP-23 readers actually render. That means headings, lists, bold, italics, links, and images, without tables or raw HTML that break in most clients.
Zap call to action
Zaps are Lightning payments attached to notes, and they are the single strongest engagement signal on Nostr. The generator can append a zap CTA tuned to the note type: a soft “zap if this resonates” for opinion pieces, a direct “zap 1000 sats to unlock the full thread” for gated content, or a creator-support line for long-form articles. It never begs. It frames the zap as a signal, not a tip jar, which is how the culture responds best.
Profile and bio updates
Kind 0 metadata events define your npub identity across every client. The generator writes concise bios that fit the roughly one-hundred-fifty-character soft limit most clients display, suggests a NIP-05 verification line, and drafts the about field so that Bitcoin maximalists, developers, and builders can all find you through the right search terms without stuffing keywords.
Best practices the generator follows
- Lowercase hashtags only. Nostr indexes t-tags case-sensitively. #Bitcoin and #bitcoin are different tags, and the ecosystem has converged on lowercase, so the generator outputs #bitcoin, #nostr, #lightning, #zaps, and #freedomtech rather than title-cased variants.
- Plain text first, Markdown second. Kind 1 notes render as plain text in most clients. The generator avoids asterisks, pound signs, and bullet characters in short notes and reserves Markdown for NIP-23 long-form where it actually renders.
- Naked links. URL shorteners leak trust on a protocol built around verifiable content. The generator pastes full URLs and lets clients handle previews.
- npub mentions done right. When mentioning another account, the generator uses the npub1 or nostr: prefix that clients parse into a profile card, not a username string that renders as flat text.
- Relay-aware brevity. Some relays enforce size limits on events. The generator keeps kind 1 notes well under those thresholds and splits longer ideas into threads or NIP-23 articles.
- No engagement bait. The culture punishes “follow for more” and “retweet if you agree” phrasing. The generator writes hooks that earn attention through substance.
Use cases
Bitcoin creators
Podcasters, newsletter writers, and educators use the generator to turn every episode or article into a kind 1 hook, a thread of key takeaways, and a NIP-23 long-form companion piece. One source asset becomes three native Nostr artifacts, each optimized for how people actually read on the protocol. Add a zap CTA and you have a distribution engine that pays you directly in sats.
Developers and open-source maintainers
Devs shipping Lightning apps, Nostr clients, or self-hosted tools use the generator to publish release notes, build-in-public updates, and RFC-style design discussions. NIP-23 long-form is ideal for technical writeups because it supports code snippets and headings, while kind 1 hooks push the update into feeds and pull replies from other devs and users.
Builders and founders
Early-stage founders treat Nostr as a high-signal channel for reaching a crowd that is already sympathetic to sovereign software, Bitcoin payments, and privacy-respecting products. The generator helps them publish launch threads, customer stories, and hiring calls in the format the audience expects, without the polished-startup voice that reads as tone-deaf on a cypherpunk network.
Journalists and researchers
Reporters covering Bitcoin, privacy, or decentralized tech use the generator to publish primary-source notes, long-form investigations under NIP-23, and curated threads that stitch together evidence. Because Nostr events are cryptographically signed, the published record is tamper-evident, which matters for accountability journalism.
Frequently asked questions
Does the generator sign and broadcast notes for me?
No. The generator produces the text content only. You paste it into your Nostr client of choice, which signs the event with your private key and broadcasts it to your configured relays. Keeping signing separate protects your keys and keeps you in full control of what actually gets published.
Which clients is the output compatible with?
All of them. The generator produces standards-compliant text for kind 1 and NIP-23 events, so anything that speaks the protocol can render it, including Damus, Amethyst, Primal, Snort, Coracle, Iris, Nostrudel, Habla for long-form, and desktop clients like Gossip.
Can I customize the tone?
Yes. You can specify voice, audience, length, and whether to include a zap CTA. The generator adapts to whether you are writing as a lone developer, a pseudonymous commentator, a company account, or a formal long-form publication.
Does it support languages other than English?
Yes. The generator writes in the language you prompt in and respects regional conventions for tags and mentions.
Is the content unique?
Every draft is generated fresh from your input. The tool does not reuse stock templates, so two users writing about the same news story will get distinctly different notes.
How do I schedule and track what I publish?
Pair the generator with Postiz. Postiz schedules Nostr posts alongside every other network you publish to, so you can plan a full week of kind 1 notes and NIP-23 articles in one calendar and keep your presence active even when you are offline.
Publish Nostr content consistently with Postiz
Drafting is only half the work. Consistent publishing, cross-posting to other networks, and measuring what actually earns zaps are what turn a Nostr presence into a real audience. Postiz gives you a scheduler, a multi-account calendar, AI drafting, and analytics across Nostr and every other major network in one open-source app. Generate the note here, schedule it in Postiz, and get back to building. Start free at postiz.com.