ChatGPT Score Checker
Paste ChatGPT output into this free score checker to see how strongly it reads like AI-written text. Great for essays, emails, blog drafts, and rewrites before final editing.
Checking the score of ChatGPT-written text
ChatGPT drafts are often clear and efficient, but they can also sound too even, too tidy, or too predictable. A ChatGPT score checker helps you spot that before someone else does, whether the audience is a teacher, client, editor, or general reader.
This page is designed for people specifically working with ChatGPT outputs. The scoring logic is model-agnostic, but the surrounding guidance focuses on common ChatGPT habits like repetitive transitions, over-explaining, and polished but slightly generic phrasing.
If the score comes back high, you do not necessarily need to scrap the draft. Usually you can keep the structure and ideas, then humanize the wording so it sounds more personal, more varied, and less obviously generated.
How to use the ChatGPT score checker
Paste raw ChatGPT output
Check the draft before heavy editing if you want a cleaner read on how the original output sounds.
Look at the score and label
The result shows how strongly the text matches common AI-writing patterns often seen in ChatGPT responses.
Humanize where needed
If the score is elevated, rewrite the stiff sections or use HumanTone to make the text sound more naturally written.
Why people check ChatGPT text
Submission safety
Get a practical signal before turning in a draft that started in ChatGPT.
Cleaner editing
See whether your manual edits already made the text sound less generated.
Content polishing
Use the score to decide if a ChatGPT draft is ready for publication or needs another pass.
Fast workflow
Score the draft, then move directly into HumanTone if you want to lower the AI feel.
How to make ChatGPT text sound less like ChatGPT
Remove repetitive framing phrases and intros that make the response sound like a polished assistant instead of a person.
Break up overly symmetrical paragraph structure so the writing has more natural movement.
Add directness, specific examples, and sharper word choice where the original draft sounds generic.
Read it as if it were a real email or article. If it sounds too balanced or too polite in every sentence, loosen it up.