Since inventing AI detection, GPTZero incorporates the latest research in detecting ChatGPT, GPT4, Google-Gemini, LLaMa, and new AI models, and investigating their sources.
Was this text written by AI or a Human?
Classify AI text from major AI models, from ChatGPT to Gemini, Llama, Claude and more.
Independent benchmarking shows GPTZero Advanced Scan has best-in-class accuracy.
Opt for video replay and human writing verification to prove your authentic voice
Easily integrate with learning management systems including Canvas, Moodle, and Google Classroom.
Build responsible writing habits with custom AI-powered writing feedback tools.
Ensure originality and check if content was copied from outside sources without attribution.
Access a deeper scan with unprecedented levels of AI text analysis.
Scan documents for plagiarism and our AI copyright check.
Easily scan dozens of files at once, organize, save, and download reports.
Our AI detection model contains 7 components that process text to determine if it was written by AI. We utilize a multi-step approach that aims to produce predictions that reach maximum accuracy, with the least false positives. Our model specializes in detecting content from Chat GPT, GPT 4, Gemini, Claude and LLaMa models.
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Built-in AI detection for
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Bring the most precise AI content checker directly into
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GPTZero was the only consistent performer, classifying AI-generated text correctly. As for the rest … not so much.
GPTZero has been incomparably more accurate than any of the other AI checkers. For me, it’s the best solution to build trust with my clients.
This tool is a magnifying glass to help teachers get a closer look behind the scenes of a document, ultimately creating a better exchange of ideas that can help kids learn.
The granular detail provided by GPTZero allows administrators to observe AI usage across the institution. This data is helping guide us on what type of education, parameters, and policies need to be in place to promote an innovative and healthy use of AI.
After talking to the class, each student we compiled with GPTZero as possibly using AI ended up telling us they did, which made us extremely confident in GPTZero’s capabilities.
Sign up for GPTZero. Its feedback aligns well with my sense of what is going on in the writing - almost line-for-line.
I'm a huge fan of the writing reports that let me verify my documents are human-written. The writing video, in particular, is a great way to visualize the writing process!
Excellent chrome extension. I ran numerous tests on human written content and the results were 100% accurate.
Outstanding! This is an extraordinary tool to not only assess the end result but to view the real-time process it took to write the document.
GPTZero is the best AI detection tool for teachers and educators.
Everything you need to know about GPTZero and our chat gpt detector. Can’t find an answer? You can talk to our customer service team.
GPTZero is the leading AI detector for checking whether a document was written by a large language model such as ChatGPT. GPTZero detects AI on sentence, paragraph, and document level. Our model was trained on a large, diverse corpus of human-written and AI-generated text, with a focus on English prose. To date, GPTZero has served over 2.5 million users around the world, and works with over 100 organizations in education, hiring, publishing, legal, and more.
Simply paste in the text you want to check, or upload your file, and we'll return an overall detection for your document, as well as sentence-by-sentence highlighting of sentences where we've detected AI. Unlike other detectors, we help you interpret the results with a description of the result, instead of just returning a number.
To get the power of our AI detector for larger texts, or a batch of files, sign up for a free account on our Dashboard.
If you want to run the AI detector as your browse, you can download our Chrome Extension, Origin, which allows you to scan the entire page in one click.
Our users have seen the use of AI-generated text proliferate into education, certification, hiring and recruitment, social writing platforms, disinformation, and beyond. We've created GPTZero as a tool to highlight the possible use of AI in writing text. In particular, we focus on classifying AI use in prose.
Overall, our classifier is intended to be used to flag situations in which a conversation can be started (for example, between educators and students) to drive further inquiry and spread awareness of the risks of using AI in written work.
No, GPTZero works robustly across a range of AI language models, including but not limited to ChatGPT, GPT-4, GPT-3, GPT-2, LLaMA, and AI services based on those models.
The nature of AI-generated content is changing constantly. As such, these results should not be used to punish students. We recommend educators to use our behind-the-scene Writing Reports as part of a holistic assessment of student work. There always exist edge cases with both instances where AI is classified as human, and human is classified as AI. Instead, we recommend educators take approaches that give students the opportunity to demonstrate their understanding in a controlled environment and craft assignments that cannot be solved with AI.
The accuracy of our model increases as more text is submitted to the model. As such, the accuracy of the model on the document-level classification will be greater than the accuracy on the paragraph-level, which is greater than the accuracy on the sentence level.
The accuracy of our model also increases for text similar in nature to our dataset. While we train on a highly diverse set of human and AI-generated text, the majority of our dataset is in English prose, written by adults.
Our classifier is not trained to identify AI-generated text after it has been heavily modified after generation (although we estimate this is a minority of the uses for AI-generation at the moment).
Currently, our classifier can sometimes flag other machine-generated or highly procedural text as AI-generated, and as such, should be used on more descriptive portions of text.
Firstly, at GPTZero, we don't believe that any AI detector is perfect. There always exist edge cases with both instances where AI is classified as human, and human is classified as AI. Nonetheless, we recommend that educators can do the following when they get a positive detection:
Our model is trained on millions of documents spanning various domains of writing including creating writing, scientific writing, blogs, news articles, and more. We test our models on a never-before-seen set of human and AI articles from a section of our large-scale dataset, in addition to a smaller set of challenging articles that are outside its training distribution.
To see the full schema and try examples yourself, check out our API documentation.
Our API returns a document_classification
field which indicates the most likely classification of the document. The possible values are HUMAN_ONLY
, MIXED
, and AI_ONLY
. We also provide a probability for each classification, which is returned in the class_probabilities
field. The keys for this field are human
, ai
or mixed
. To get the probability for the most likely classification, the predicted_class
field can be used. The class probability corresponding to the predicted class can be interpreted as the chance that the detector is correct in its classification. I.e. 90% means that 90% of the time on similar documents our detector is correct in the prediction it makes. Lastly, each prediction comes with a confidence_category
field, which can be high
, medium
, or low
. Confidence categories are tuned such that when the confidence_category
field is high
99.1% of human articles are classified as human, and 98.4% of AI articles are classified as AI.
Additionally, we highlight sentences that been detected to be written by AI. API users can access this highlighting through the highlight_sentence_for_ai
field. The sentence-level classification should not be solely used to indicate that an essay contains AI (such as ChatGPT plagiarism). Rather, when a document gets a MIXED
or AI_ONLY
classification, the highlighted sentence will indicate where in the document we believe this occurred.
No. We do not store or collect the documents passed into any calls to our API. We wanted to be overly cautious on the side of storing data from any organizations using our API.
However, we do store inputs from calls made from our dashboard. This data is only used in aggregate by GPTZero to further improve the service for our users. You can refer to our privacy policy for more details.
You can use the following bibtex citation:
@misc{tian2024gptzero,
publisher = {GPTZero},
url = {https://gptzero.me},
year = {2024},
author = {Tian, Edward and Cui, Alexander},
title = {GPTZero: Towards detection of AI-generated text using zero-shot and supervised methods}
}