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AI Writing Score Checker

Measure how strongly an article, essay, email, or report reads like AI writing. Use this AI writing score checker to spot stiff phrasing before you publish, submit, or send.

0 words, minimum 20 words for scoring

Why check an AI writing score?

An AI writing score is useful when the concern is not just whether a detector flags your text, but whether the writing itself feels overly polished, repetitive, or synthetic to a human reader. That matters for essays, content marketing, client deliverables, and internal business writing.

This page is tuned for the broader “AI writing score” intent, so the copy focuses on drafts in progress, editorial review, and practical revision. The underlying scoring logic is the same lightweight analyzer used across HumanTone, but the guidance here is aimed at people shaping real pieces of writing.

If a draft lands in the mixed or high-AI range, the next move is usually simple: loosen structure, trim formulaic phrases, and make the prose sound more like a person with a point of view rather than a model assembling clean sentences.

How to check your AI writing score

1

Paste a substantial draft

Use a paragraph, section, or full passage rather than a one-line sample so the score has enough context.

2

See how machine-like it reads

The score estimates whether the tone, rhythm, and phrasing match common AI-writing patterns.

3

Edit with intent

Use the result to decide whether the draft needs lighter revisions or a full humanizing pass.

When an AI writing score is useful

Essay review

Check whether a school or university draft reads too polished or formulaic before submission.

Content editing

Review blog posts and landing pages for generic AI texture before they go live.

Client work

Sanity check agency copy or freelance drafts when originality and voice matter.

Revision feedback

Use the score as a fast signal while rewriting for a more natural cadence.

How to improve an AI writing score

1

Swap polished but vague transitions for simpler wording that sounds like a person moving naturally from one point to the next.

2

Mix sentence lengths more aggressively, especially if the draft settles into the same rhythm for several lines in a row.

3

Cut filler qualifiers and generic framing phrases when they do not add real meaning.

4

Bring back specifics, judgment, and plainspoken emphasis so the writing feels authored rather than generated.

Frequently Asked Questions