An honest ranking of the AI detectors that actually matter for student writing in 2026, scored on Turnitin correlation, ESL handling, sentence-level evidence, free tier limits, and .edu pricing. TextSight ranks first overall because of ESL-aware calibration and the lowest false-positive rate on formally-taught English, but we tell you exactly where GPTZero, Turnitin AI, and the rest fit a real student workflow. Pre-scan your draft free in about six seconds.
A detector that is good for SEO marketers is not automatically good for students. The student use case has its own criteria, and the ranking shifts accordingly.
The institutional detector at most universities in 2026 is Turnitin. Students cannot self-check there because the AI report is only visible to instructors after submission. So the practical measure of a consumer detector is how closely its verdict tracks what Turnitin will eventually flag on the same passage. TextSight and GPTZero track Turnitin most closely in our testing; ZeroGPT and Quillbot tend to over-flag relative to the institutional verdict.
This is the single biggest fairness issue in student detection. Detectors trained predominantly on American English consistently over-flag formally-taught Indian English, Filipino academic English, Nigerian university English, and other ESL registers. Our calibration testing shows TextSight reduces false positives on ESL writing by roughly 40% versus the US-centric baseline. Any student detector that ignores this dimension is doing real harm.
A single 86% AI verdict on a 1,500-word essay is useless. You need to know which sentences triggered the score so you can revise those specific lines into your own voice. Sentence-level highlights turn a scary verdict into an actionable revision pass. Verdict-first detectors leave you guessing whether to rewrite the whole essay.
Students do not have $20 per month to spend on detection. A free tier needs to be useful for occasional checking without being a marketing trap. TextSight free gives 3 scans per day at 5,000 characters per scan with sentence-level highlights and a plagiarism risk indicator. GPTZero offers a generous free tier with academic brand. ZeroGPT runs unlimited free scans but the experience is ad-heavy and the free version omits sentence-level highlights.
Once the free tier runs out, the question is what the realistic monthly cost looks like for a student writer. TextSight Pro drops from $19.99 to $13.99 per month with a verified .edu email address. GPTZero, Originality.ai, Copyleaks, and Winston AI do not publish student pricing. ZeroGPT is unlimited free but ad-supported. Practical affordability matters more than headline list price.
The detectors that present results as guidance with confidence levels are better suited to academic use than detectors that present a binary AI-or-human auto-fail verdict. Auto-fail framing in tools deployed institutionally has caused real well-documented harm to students, including ESL students who were wrongly flagged. We rewarded tools that frame results responsibly and penalised tools that do not.
Quick reference table covering entry price, free tier, sentence-level evidence, ESL false-positive rate, API access, and best fit for each of the six detectors ranked on this page.
One section per detector, in order, with the strengths and the structural weakness we identified for each in the context of student writing.
Sentence-level highlights, ESL calibration that lowers false positives by roughly 40%, .edu discount on Pro, and an AI rewriter-style rewrite suggestion in the same workflow. Tracks Turnitin within 5 to 10 points.
Yes, TextSight ranks itself first, and we are upfront about the conflict. The reason it earns the top spot for students is structural. It is the only detector in this ranking that combines four properties at once. Sentence-level evidence so you know which specific lines to revise before submitting. ESL calibration so formally-taught English does not over-flag. Verdict framing that presents guidance instead of a binary auto-fail. And a .edu discount that drops Pro to $13.99 per month for verified student emails. None of the other five tools combine all four. Free tier: 3 scans per day, 5,000 characters per scan, no card, no email. Pro: $19.99 per month list, $13.99 per month with .edu verification, $14.99 per month on yearly billing.
The detector students and teachers cite first by name. Generous free tier, solid burstiness-based detection, recognised across higher education. Tracks Turnitin within roughly 10 to 15 points.
GPTZero became the academic default because it shipped early, communicated clearly, and built a brand teachers actually recognise. The detection is solid, particularly on raw model output, and the free tier is genuinely useful for students doing occasional checks. The institutional tier is widely deployed across US high schools and universities, so a pre-scan report carrying the GPTZero brand has built-in credibility with most US professors. The weakness for students is that the verdict framing tends toward binary, which has produced well-documented false-positive incidents in classrooms, particularly on ESL writing. Pricing for individuals is in the $14.99 to $19.99 range and there is no published student discount.
Not a consumer product. Students cannot purchase Turnitin and cannot self-check before submission. It ranks here because it is the verdict that actually determines academic outcomes at most universities in 2026.
Turnitin's AI detector is on this ranking even though no student can buy it, because for academic users the Turnitin AI verdict is the one that actually counts. Students cannot self-check on Turnitin; the AI report is only visible to instructors and administrators after submission. That asymmetry is precisely the gap the consumer detectors above fill. The standard 2026 student workflow is to pre-scan your draft with a Turnitin-correlated consumer detector before submission, revise the flagged sentences into your own voice, and then submit. TextSight and GPTZero are the two most Turnitin-correlated consumer detectors in side-by-side testing. We are honest that no consumer detector will perfectly predict the institutional verdict, but pre-scanning gets you close.
Purpose-built for high-volume content workflows, which translates well to dissertation writers, journalism students, and writing-heavy graduate programs scanning long-form work in volume.
Originality.ai is built for SEO content agencies but the same strengths translate to writing-heavy student work: long-form scanning, plagiarism plus AI in one report, and a credit-based pricing model that suits intermittent intensive use rather than monthly subscription. For a dissertation writer running scans on chapter drafts, or a journalism student protecting bylined work, Originality.ai is a defensible pick. It loses points for students relative to TextSight on ESL calibration and on the lack of a verified-.edu discount, but it remains a solid third-party signal alongside the primary detector.
An institutional plagiarism plus AI bundle. Some schools deploy Copyleaks alongside or instead of Turnitin. Relevant to students whose institution already runs it, less relevant as a self-purchased pre-scan.
Copyleaks is the institutional bundle that some universities run instead of Turnitin. The product wraps plagiarism, AI detection, source matching, and LMS integrations into a single procurement. For students whose institution officially uses Copyleaks, knowing how Copyleaks calibrates AI scoring is useful background. As a self-purchased pre-submission scan, however, Copyleaks is overkill and enterprise-priced. Consumer detectors give a better cost-to-value ratio for the individual student workflow. Copyleaks ranks here because of institutional reach, not because of consumer suitability.
Unlimited scans, no signup, ad-supported. Useful when you just want a quick paragraph-level reading and do not need sentence highlights or workflow features.
ZeroGPT serves the student audience that just wants to paste a paragraph into a box and see a number. The free tier is genuinely unlimited, no signup gate, no card, useful for casual checking when you have already revised your draft and just want a sanity reading. The accuracy is reasonable on raw model output but the experience is ad-heavy, the verdict framing is binary, the free tier omits sentence-level highlights, and there is no Turnitin correlation testing we would trust. It is a free utility, not a serious pre-submission workflow tool. For a single paragraph at the end of a long writing night, it is fine. For graded essays or dissertations, the detectors above it on this list do a better job.
Free tier with no card, no email. Pro drops to $13.99 per month with a verified .edu email. Yearly billing saves 25%. Full details on the pricing page.
Billed $89.88/year, Save $30
Billed $179.88/year, Save $60
Billed $359.88/year, Save $120
Yearly billing saves 25%. Pro drops to $13.99/mo with verified .edu email. View full pricing →
Student writing is not one workflow. Here are the five common situations and the detector we would actually pick for each one.
Pick TextSight as the primary. The sentence-level highlights tell you exactly which lines to revise before submission, ESL calibration reduces false positives on formally-taught English, and the free tier covers occasional checking. If you want a second opinion, cross-check with GPTZero free. Both flagging the same passage is a strong signal those lines need rewriting.
Pick TextSight. The roughly 40% lower false-positive rate on ESL writing in our calibration testing is the single most important fairness feature in this ranking. GPTZero, Originality.ai, and ZeroGPT all show measurable bias against formally-taught non-native English; TextSight is the only one in this ranking explicitly calibrated for it.
Pick TextSight Pro for the primary workflow and Originality.ai for occasional cross-checks. TextSight handles the day-to-day chapter scans inside one subscription; Originality.ai is a good second-opinion tool for the final chapter pass because of its long-form orientation and plagiarism-plus-AI bundling.
Pick the TextSight free tier or ZeroGPT. TextSight free gives you sentence-level highlights and a daily cap of 3 scans; ZeroGPT gives you unlimited but ad-supported quick reads. Either is a defensible 30-second answer for a low-stakes paragraph check.
Pick TextSight as the primary pre-submission detector. No consumer detector is publicly calibrated against Copyleaks specifically, but TextSight's sentence-level evidence and conservative verdict framing remain the most useful pre-submission signal regardless of which institutional tool processes your final submission.
We want to be honest about what this product is for. The student detection market often pretends pre-scanning is about outperforming institutional detection. We do not frame it that way because that framing is dishonest and harmful.
Pre-scanning your own draft to see which sentences happen to read as AI is the same writing hygiene as running spellcheck before submission. The honest student workflow is this: write the essay yourself, scan to see if your phrasing accidentally resembles model output, and revise the flagged lines into your own voice with the sentence-level evidence in front of you. That is not gaming the detector. That is good revision practice in a year when institutional AI detection is unavoidable, sometimes inaccurate, and disproportionately rough on ESL writers.
What pre-scanning is not for is taking an AI-generated essay, running it through an AI rewriter-style rewrite, and submitting the result. That workflow is academic dishonesty regardless of whether the detector catches it, and we are not going to pretend otherwise. If you wrote the essay yourself and a detector still flags it, the right response is to revise the flagged lines into your voice, not to obscure the fact that you wrote them.
100-passage internal benchmark across the six tools ranked above: 25 GPT-4 passages, 25 Claude Sonnet passages, 25 native English student essays, 25 ESL student essays. Tools tested at default thresholds within a 4-hour window. Turnitin AI is institutional and cannot be tested individually, so it is noted but not scored.
If you are an ESL or international student worried about being over-flagged, the ESL false-positive column is the only number on this table that should drive your choice. TextSight reports 6%. The other consumer detectors here cluster between 16% and 22%. On a 1,500-word essay that is the difference between one revised paragraph and a stomach-turning conversation with your professor about a verdict you did not earn. ESL FPR matters more than headline accuracy because false positives are the failure mode that hurts honest students.
If you are pre-scanning before a Turnitin submission, look at the combined column rather than the raw GPT-4 TPR. Originality.ai posts the highest combined detection rate at 94%, but it pairs that with a 19% ESL FPR. TextSight's 91% combined and 4.5% combined FPR is the better tradeoff for student work because the consequence of a false positive on a graded essay is far worse than the consequence of catching 3% fewer AI passages on a draft you wrote yourself anyway.
If you write a dissertation, a thesis chapter, or any long-form graded assignment, the right setup is TextSight as your primary daily scanner and Originality.ai as the second-opinion pass on the final chapter draft. Two detectors agreeing on a flagged sentence is a stronger signal than either alone, and the combination gives you both the ESL-aware low FPR for daily revision and the higher raw TPR for a final sanity check before submission.
The deeper guide for college-specific workflows, Turnitin pre-scans, and .edu pricing.
Read the guide →Head-to-head between the #1 student pick and the #2 academic incumbent.
Compare →Why the consumer pre-scan and the institutional verdict are different categories.
Read the comparison →Full tier breakdown for Free, Starter, Pro, and Business. Pro drops to $13.99/mo with .edu.
See pricing →Free to try. No card. Sentence-level highlights and ESL-aware calibration in about six seconds. Pro drops to $13.99/mo with a verified .edu email.