“Cut the fluff” is advice handed out like freebies in content writing circles. Indeed, search engines don’t reward padding, and readers don’t have the patience for it either.

But somewhere along the way, the rule became a religion. As a result, articles are sometimes scrubbed so clean of fluff that they read like instruction manuals. Technically correct but sans nuance, and about as enjoyable to read as the back of a shampoo bottle.

Avoiding fluff is a good idea. Avoiding it blindly, without understanding, is the problem. 

What Is Fluff?

Fluff is any word, sentence, or phrase that doesn’t add new information to what you’re saying. It’s the “In today’s fast-paced world…” at the start of an article or three sentences that say the same thing in slightly different ways.

What Does Fluff Actually Look Like?

Consider this sentence: “Water is, without a doubt, absolutely essential and critically important for human survival and life.”

Now compare it to: “Water is essential for survival.”

Same information. The first version just has a lot of company. That extra words or phrases such as “without a doubt”,  “absolutely,  “critically important,” and ”life” are fluff.

Another common example is the throat-clearing opener: “In this blog post, I will be discussing the topic of fluff in content writing and why it may or may not always be considered a bad thing.” You could delete that entire sentence, and the reader would lose nothing. The article itself does the explaining.

Have you ever searched for a recipe online and landed on a personal blog where the author goes on and on about the dish’s background and the importance of each ingredient? All content except the real recipe is fluff. 

Why Do Writers Add Fluff?

Writers don’t add fluff randomly. There is almost always a reason behind it. The purpose could be practical,  psychological and sometimes creative. Let’s try to understand what could be the reason for adding the fluff:

To hit the word count: Along with deadlines, professional content writers also have to ensure a minimum word count. When a client asks for 1,500 words and the writer has only 900 good ones, fluff is used to fill the gap. 

Out of anxiety: When the author is trying to explain a relatively new or tough concept, they fear that the reader won’t understand unless the point is made twice, then once more to be sure.

To sound authoritative: More words signal more expertise(according to some). Long-form content is the most trusted form of content. There is an unspoken assumption that if someone wrote this much, they must really know what they are talking about.

To sound professional: When the quarterly report starts with something like “It is with great pleasure that we present the findings of this quarter, which reflect the continued dedication and tireless efforts of our exceptional team across all departments.” All they want to say is “Here are this quarter’s results.” The compliments are just fluff, but they do make the reader feel good.

To delight the readers: Some writers take pride in how good they are at word play and vocabulary, and like to flaunt it. And in doing so, they obviously add words that might not add new information, but they do add value to their content by making it more interesting to read.

To add humor: “I personally believe, and this is just my own humble opinion which you are absolutely free to disagree with, that pineapple on pizza is a war crime.” Many great writer have used humor as a very effective tool in their writing. So the fluff (humor) is what attracts readers to their article. It may not add new information, but it evokes emotions in readers, hooking them into the article. (The article itself could be on a very serious subject, but the writer writes in such a way that it isn’t too heavy or preachy)

Content That Should Absolutely Cut the Fluff

With all that said, there are categories where fluff has no place whatsoever.

Technical documentation needs to be precise and scannable. A developer reading API docs at midnight is not looking for a warm opening paragraph. Medical or legal content must be exact, as even a single extra word can cause confusion or misinterpretation. Instructions and how-to guides should respect the reader’s time above all.

In these formats, fluff can actually cause harm by obscuring critical information.

Why Does AI Write Such Fluffy Content?

AI models are trained on enormous amounts of human-written text. A lot of that text, especially online, is fluffy. For instance: blog posts optimized for search engines, corporate reports padded for length, academic papers written to impress rather than inform. The model learns patterns from all of it.

If you’ve ever used an AI writing tool, you’ve probably noticed it has a fondness for a certain kind of opening: “In the ever-evolving landscape of…” or “It goes without saying that…” (and then it says it anyway).

The result is prose that technically says something but often takes the long way around to say it. It mirrors the internet’s own writing habits.

Why Fluff Is Not Always Bad

This is the part most content guides skip, and I think that’s a mistake.

Fluff, in the right place, serves a purpose.

Think about a personal essay or a lifestyle blog. The writer is talking about their morning routine, their favorite coffee and the way the light hits the window at 7 AM. Is every sentence strictly informative? No. Is it fluff? Technically, yes. Does it ruin the piece? Absolutely not — it is the piece. That warmth, that texture, that unhurried pace is exactly what the reader came for.

Or consider a brand that writes conversationally — one that opens emails with “Hope your week is going well!” before getting to the point. Is that informative? No. Is it building a relationship with the reader? Yes. In that context, a little fluff is doing emotional labor so that the customer feels the sender is a person and not a machine.

Even in longer educational content, a well-placed example or a gentle recap can help the reader stay oriented. 

Not every word needs to be load-bearing. Sometimes a sentence exists simply to let the reader breathe. Here’s summing up what fluff in the right place does for your content:

  • It builds an emotional connection with the reader
  • It establishes personal and brand voice. 
  • It makes difficult content more digestible.
  • It creates breathing room.
  • It evokes emotions and hooks the readers.
  • It signals care and respect
  • It softens the message.

Conclusion

Fluff is like sugar.

Some content can’t do without it: a personal essay without warmth is just a list of facts, and a travel blog without a little lightness can feel cold and robotic. 

Some content needs just enough to make the reading experience pleasant without distracting from the substance, such as educational blogs and editorials. 

And some content will taste genuinely weird with it, such as technical guides, medical information, and legal writing. It’s like sprinkling sugar on your fried chicken. Nobody wants that.

So next time someone tells you to cut all the fluff,  pause and ask yourself what kind of content you’re writing? Who are you writing it for, and what do you want them to feel? Then choose your fluff wisely.

Because sometimes, a few extra words are exactly what make something worth reading.