What an AI detector reads in your essays
Essays are where AI false positives hit hardest. A well-structured argumentative essay — clear topic sentences, formal transitions, even paragraph lengths — looks statistically similar to AI writing whether or not you used any. That's why conscientious students and non-native English writers get flagged on work they wrote themselves, and why checking before you submit is the only sane move.
The detector below reads the same signals graders' tools weight: word predictability, sentence-rhythm variation (burstiness), connective overuse, and structural regularity. It shows how Turnitin, GPTZero and Originality read your essay, a per-sentence risk list, and a plain-English explanation of why each flag fired — so you can fix the genuinely risky passages instead of rewriting the whole thing blindly.
If your essay reads high, keep your version history and run it through the Powerful Model — it clears the AI fingerprint so it reads as human while Citation-Keeper Mode protects your references, quotes and argument. Backed by the Green-Or-Free guarantee — it passes or your money back — and your essay never stored, sold, or trained on.