How to Check Your Own Essay for Accidental AI Patterns Before You Submit

How to Check Your Own Essay for Accidental AI Patterns Before You Submit

Photo of author, Vertech EditorialVertech Editorial Mar 1, 2026 6 min read
Photo of author, Vertech Editorial

Vertech Editorial

Mar 1, 2026

Clean writers can still trigger AI detectors. Here's what AI-sounding prose actually looks like - and how to fix it before you submit.

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How to write an A+ essay with AI

You can write entirely on your own and still end up with an essay that an AI detector flags. This isn't a bug - it's a feature of how these tools work. They look for patterns, not intent. And human writers, especially careful, well-organized academic writers, often produce patterns that overlap with AI output.

Here's how to identify those patterns in your own writing and fix them before anyone else sees them.

You Can Write Like AI Without Knowing It

AI writing tends to be predictable. Sentences are a similar length. Transitions follow a formula. Vocabulary is wide but not personal. Structure is clear but generic. When you're writing academically, you're often aiming for exactly those things - clear, organized, formally worded prose.

That's not a flaw in your writing. But it does mean your writing might score higher on an AI detector than you'd expect. The fix is to put a bit more of you into the writing - without sacrificing quality.

What AI-Sounding Writing Actually Looks Like

AI-sounding More human alternative
"Furthermore, it is important to note that..." "There's also this:" or "One more thing worth saying:"
"In conclusion, the evidence suggests..." Just restate your point plainly without a label
All sentences the same length (medium-long) Mix short punchy sentences with longer ones deliberately
"utilize," "demonstrate," "leverage," "facilitate" "use," "show," "help with" - plain verbs, not formal synonyms
No first-person at all, even in argement essays A few "I think" or "in my view" where appropriate

How to Run Your Own Check Before You Submit

ZeroGPT

Free. Paste your essay and it gives a percentage estimate with flagged sentences highlighted.

Grammarly

The premium version includes an AI detection score alongside grammar. Useful for early drafts.

Read it aloud

The oldest and most reliable check. If it sounds robotic or nothing sounds like something you'd say, revise it.

Quick Fixes That Make Your Writing Sound More Like You

  • Break up long sentences. If a sentence has two ideas, make it two sentences. Short sentences almost never flag.
  • Remove transitional filler. Delete "Furthermore," "Moreover," "It is important to note that" - they add nothing and sound like boilerplate.
  • Add one specific detail or personal observation. Something from a lecture, a class discussion, or your own experience. AI doesn't have those.
  • Vary your sentence openers. If three sentences in a row start the same way, change one of them. That pattern is a flag.

Frequently Asked Questions

If I run my essay through ZeroGPT and it says 0%, am I safe?
Safer than not checking, but not guaranteed. Different detectors use different models - your professor might use Turnitin, which has its own detection engine. A 0% on ZeroGPT doesn't mean 0% on Turnitin. The best safety net is having your writing process documented regardless of what the detector says.
I write very formally. Will I always be flagged?
Not always - but it's a risk worth managing. Formal writing does flag more often. Adding just a few humanizing touches (a specific example, a varied sentence, a plain-English word in place of a formal one) often brings the score down significantly without hurting the quality of your writing.