khan vs quilt

Compare khan and quilt search interest over the past year with a simple trend chart.

HEADLINE INSIGHT

khan has a clear lead over quilt right now.

Over the past 12 months, khan has averaged about 64 on the Google Trends scale, while quilt sits around 8.

QUICK CONTEXT

Strong leadStable interest

khan peaked around February 2025 at a score of 77.

khan insight

Based on the same timeframe as the chart.

  • Average level: 64
  • Trend: steady
  • Stability: steady
  • Sharpest peak: February 2025 (score 77)
  • Best month by average: September 2025

quilt insight

Based on the same timeframe as the chart.

  • Average level: 8
  • Trend: steady
  • Stability: steady
  • Sharpest peak: August 2025 (score 9)
  • Best month by average: November 2025

Trend moments

  • khan peaked around February 2025 at a score of 77.
  • quilt peaked around August 2025 at a score of 9.
  • There is no clear crossover. One term has held the lead through most of the period.

What might happen next

The chart does not point to a dramatic shift either way. Think of this as a snapshot of current interest rather than a strong forecast.

Full summary

khan dominates searches compared with quilt over the past 12 months, with an average lead of about 88 percent.

  • khan has climbed by about 6 percent from the early part of the chart to the most recent section.
  • quilt also stays fairly level across the period.

These are broad topics, so the chart mostly reflects general curiosity. If you want a more focused view, try comparing more specific phrases or product names.

At a glance

  • Average interest: khan 64, quilt 8. khan comes out ahead on most weeks.
  • khan peaked in February 2025 at 77.25. quilt peaked in August 2025 at 8.5.
  • Recent trend: khan looks steady, while quilt looks steady.
  • Stability: khan is steady, and quilt is steady. Higher volatility usually means more short lived spikes.
  • Head to head: khan leads in about 100 percent of points, while quilt leads in about 0 percent.
  • There is no clear crossover in this view. One term keeps the lead from start to finish.

Side by side

Metrickhanquilt
Average interest648
Recent directionsteadysteady
Stabilitysteadysteady
Peak monthFebruary 2025August 2025
Best month by averageSeptember 2025November 2024
Share of leading points100%0%
Lead changes0not recent

Deep dive

This chart shows how often people searched for khan and quilt over the past 12 months. Values go from zero to one hundred for each term, where one hundred is that term’s own highest point in the selected period.

If you split the period into three chunks, the early averages look like this: khan 63 and quilt 8. In the middle section they move to khan 63 and quilt 7. By the most recent third they sit around khan 66 and quilt 8.

khan hits its sharpest peak in February 2025. quilt peaks in August 2025. These spikes often line up with big news, events or marketing pushes.

There is no clear crossover here. One term keeps the lead almost the entire way, which usually points to a more durable long run advantage.

khan looks steady overall with a steady trend. quilt looks steady with a steady trend. Steady, slow moving lines usually reflect stable evergreen interest, while choppier lines tend to follow news and social media spikes.

What this scale means

Scores come from Google Trends. Each line is scaled to that term’s own peak in the selected period, so focus on the shape of the lines, the timing of peaks and who is ahead rather than the raw numbers.

Related comparisons

Other matchups people have checked that include khan or quilt.

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to the most common questions about how TrendArc works and how to read the charts.

How fresh is the data?
TrendArc uses Google Trends data. Exact freshness depends on the timeframe, but for recent views it is typically delayed by a short amount of time rather than being fully real time.
What can I compare?
You can compare almost any two topics that people search for on Google, such as products, people, brands, events or general terms. If a term has very little search volume, the chart may look sparse.
Where does the data come from?
All charts and scores are based on Google Trends interest over time. We normalise the values so each line goes from 0 to 100 within the selected period.
Is it free to use?
Yes. You can run comparisons and explore interest trends for free. We may add premium features later, but the core comparison view will stay free to use.
Why are some results slower to load?
When you open a comparison for the first time we fetch the data from Google Trends and generate summaries. After that, repeat visits to the same comparison should feel much faster.
Can I share a comparison?
Yes. Each comparison has its own clean URL that you can copy and share. Anyone with the link will see the same chart and summaries.
Do I need an account?
No account is required to browse comparisons. If we add saved lists or alerts in future, those might use optional sign in.
How accurate are the trends?
Google Trends is designed for relative interest rather than exact search counts. Use the charts to compare patterns, peaks and direction rather than as precise numbers.