Use case

Natural rewrites for
Students.

If you're a student, you've probably heard that AI detectors flag real work as fake, or you've used an assistant to draft something and want it to read in your own voice. This page is the honest version of what a humanizer does for students — and where the line is.

The problem

  • AI detectors produce false positives on legitimate work
  • Non-native English students are flagged disproportionately
  • Schools' AI policies vary and are often unclear

How Humanizer helps

Humanizer rewrites text for natural rhythm and word choice so it reads less mechanically, and its voice-matching feature lets you steer the output toward how you actually write. Every rewrite shows a Sapling-based detector score, so you get transparency on how natural the result reads rather than a vague promise.

Where we stand Context matters. If your school prohibits AI use, running AI output through a humanizer to disguise it almost certainly violates that policy, and that's on you — you're accountable for what you submit. Where this is legitimate: you're a non-native English writer worried about false positives on your own work, or you're polishing a draft you actually wrote. We don't claim to pass any specific detector, and we won't pretend humanizing banned AI output is anything other than a choice you own.
Free · no signup

Humanize your text.
Right here, right now.

Paste up to 1,500 characters, pick a mode, and get a real rewrite with an AI-detector score. No account, no card.

Or try a sample:
Your text0 / 1,500
Humanized — Casual

Your rewrite will appear here.

Free tool runs Claude Haiku, one pass. Pro (app & web) uses the stronger model with a detector-guided retry loop, longer text, and unlimited rewrites.

Humanize free — then get the app

Try the rewriter right here, no signup. Get the native Mac & iPhone app for unlimited rewrites, longer text, and the stronger model.

FAQ

Questions, answered.

It depends entirely on your school's policy and what you're submitting. Polishing your own draft or reducing false positives on writing you wrote is legitimate. Disguising AI output your school forbids is a violation, and that responsibility is yours.