Teachers, editors and readers all ask the same question. Here's what AI-written text tends to look like, how to check it, and why you should never rely on a single score.
Uniform sentence lengths, spotless-but-generic phrasing, stock transitions (“moreover”, “in conclusion”), no concrete personal details, and suspiciously perfect punctuation throughout.
Paste the text and get a flag-risk percentage with per-sentence highlights and reasons, in 25 languages. Signs of human writing (typos, informal rhythm) honestly lower the score.
Detectors false-flag real people — especially non-native writers and formal styles. Use the score as one signal among many, and never as the sole basis for an accusation.
On raw AI text, reasonably good; on edited or humanized text, all detectors (including ours) become unreliable — and we say so openly instead of pretending.
Yes — Mepo8 analyzes 25 languages with language-specific signals, and tells you honestly when confidence is lower.