Catch clichéd phrasings, stock definitions, and uncited specifics — the signals that make writing read like it came from somewhere else. Free, no signup.
Up to 500 words on the free tier, 2,000 signed in. Best for blog posts, essays, articles, and AI-generated first drafts.
Each flag is categorized by risk type (cliché, stock definition, suspicious specificity, uncited claim, paraphrasing pattern) and risk level (low / medium / high).
Each flag includes a specific suggestion: rewrite, add citation, or break parallel structure. Make your draft sound like you wrote it, not like someone else did.
No — and we're explicit about that. We do not search the live web or compare against any database. This is a style risk analyzer: it flags passages whose phrasing or specificity suggests they may have been sourced elsewhere. For real plagiarism detection (matching against the open web), use a paid tool that maintains a web index — Copyleaks, Quetext, or Turnitin.
It's not fake — it's a different product. Most "plagiarism" in human writing isn't copy-paste; it's clichéd phrasings, recycled definitions, suspiciously specific numbers without citation, and stock parallel structures. The risk analyzer catches those without false advertising. We'd rather ship an honest free tool than a misleading one.
Five categories: cliché phrases ("in today's fast-paced world"), stock definitions (Wikipedia-style "X is a Y that does Z" openings), suspicious specificity (precise numbers, dates, or quotes without citation), uncited common-knowledge claims that should have a source, and paraphrasing patterns (textbook tone, perfect parallel structure that suggests rephrased canonical text).
Up to 500 words on the free tier. 2,000 words signed in. The analysis is heavy, so caps are tighter than the lighter tools (Paraphraser, Summarizer).
When the stakes require it: academic submissions that get checked against Turnitin, journalism that needs source provenance, books before publishing, or any work where being matched to a known source would be reputationally damaging. Use this tool first as a quick triage; use a paid tool when you need verified clean against a live web index.
Treat it as a directional indicator, not a verdict. A high score means the prose reads original; a low score means there are style signals worth reviewing. Neither score guarantees that the text isn't matched against any specific source — only a real web-index checker can tell you that.
3 free scans/day, no card. See how your draft reads to AI detectors.