AI Score Checker
Check your AI score instantly. Paste text from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or your own draft to see how strongly it reads like AI-generated writing, then improve it with HumanTone if needed.
What an AI Score Helps You Understand
An AI score is useful when you want a quick read on whether a draft feels overly polished, repetitive, or machine-like. It gives writers, editors, students, and marketers a simple way to sanity check text before publishing, submitting, or sending it.
HumanTone’s AI scorer is built around the same lightweight detection logic already used on the site. Instead of hiding the result behind a broad yes-or-no label, this page makes the score the main event so you can evaluate risk quickly and decide whether to revise.
This is especially helpful for AI-assisted workflows. If you draft with ChatGPT or Claude, you may not want to remove every trace of AI assistance, but you probably do want writing that sounds more natural, less generic, and less likely to trigger suspicion from readers or automated detectors.
How to Use the AI Scorer
Paste a real sample
Use at least one full paragraph. Scores are more meaningful when the tool has enough writing to analyze.
Review the score and label
A higher score means the text matches more of the common statistical and stylistic patterns associated with AI writing.
Revise or humanize
If the score is high, rewrite the draft manually or send it to HumanTone to make the language sound more natural.
Why Writers Use an AI Score Checker
Quick risk check
See whether a draft feels noticeably AI-written before you publish or submit it.
Better revisions
Use the score as feedback while editing sentence variety, tone, and phrasing.
Model-agnostic
Works as a practical check for text from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and similar tools.
Built into the HumanTone flow
If a draft scores high, you can move straight into rewriting and humanizing on the same site.
Ways to Lower an AI Score Naturally
Break up long, evenly structured sentences with more natural rhythm and variation.
Replace generic transitions like “furthermore” or “in conclusion” with more direct language when it fits.
Add concrete phrasing, plain-English wording, and human-sounding emphasis instead of polished filler.
Read the draft aloud. If it sounds stiff or overly balanced, revise until it sounds like something a real person would say.