Detector plus humanizer workflow

Detect AI-like writing, then humanize the draft

Run a fast signal check first. If the text feels too generic or too polished, move into a rewrite flow that keeps the meaning while making the copy clearer and more natural.

Diagnose
Find the phrases and rhythm patterns that make text feel AI-generated.
Explain
See the specific signals behind the risk band.
Revise
Hand off into a humanizer instead of stopping at a score.
Detector preview

The useful part is the explanation

Signal-based
Sample draft358 chars

In today's fast-paced digital landscape, it is important to note that businesses must leverage AI-powered content workflows to maximize efficiency, enhance engagement, and achieve scalable growth outcomes across multiple channels. Furthermore, this transformative approach provides a robust framework for organizations seeking to unlock their full potential.

Detected signalsHigh AI-like risk

Generic setup phrases such as fast-paced digital landscape.

Stiff transitions and abstract business wording.

Long, polished sentence rhythm with little concrete detail.

Free AI detector

Paste text and inspect the signals

This checker gives an estimate, not proof. Use it to find writing patterns worth revising before publishing.

No sign-up needed

Text to check

Works best on English paragraphs, emails, blog sections, landing-page copy, and article drafts.

358 chars

AI-like risk result

Your risk band and signal breakdown will appear here.

AI-like signal score--
Not checked
FAQ

AI detector questions before you trust a score

Use the detector as an editing signal. These answers explain accuracy, privacy, rewriting, and how to interpret the result.

Is this AI detector a final proof that text was AI-written?

No. AI detectors can be wrong. This tool is designed to surface writing patterns that often feel AI-like, not to prove who or what wrote the text.

What should I do after a high-risk result?

Use the signal breakdown to revise generic phrases, repeated transitions, stiff rhythm, and vague claims. The humanizer can help with that first editing pass.

Does the detector store my text?

The detector is designed as a lightweight check. Avoid pasting sensitive private data into any online writing tool unless you have reviewed its data policy.

Why can human writing sometimes receive a high-risk score?

Very polished, generic, or formulaic human writing can share patterns with AI drafts. Treat a high score as a prompt to review the text, not as an accusation.

Why can AI-generated text sometimes receive a low-risk score?

A draft with concrete details, varied rhythm, and specific examples may look less machine-shaped even if AI helped create it. No detector can identify authorship with certainty.

What kinds of text work best with this detector?

It works best on complete English paragraphs such as essays, emails, blog sections, landing-page copy, and article drafts. Very short snippets are harder to judge.

Can I use the detector before using the humanizer?

Yes. The strongest workflow is to detect first, inspect the signals, then humanize the parts with generic phrasing, repeated transitions, or stiff sentence rhythm.

Will humanizing guarantee a lower detector score?

No. Humanizing should improve clarity, specificity, and rhythm, but it cannot guarantee a result from every third-party detector. Always review the final draft yourself.

Is this safe for academic or professional work?

Use it as a revision aid, not a way to bypass rules. Follow your school, employer, or client policy and keep citations, claims, names, and numbers accurate.

How should I interpret low, medium, and high risk?

Low means fewer common AI-like patterns, medium means several areas deserve editing, and high means the draft likely needs a stronger human review before use.