WriteHuman
Pay-Per-Request Pricing
WriteHuman's whole pitch is that it does less, on purpose. No sliders, no modes, no settings — one text box, one Humanize button, and you're done. It charges by the request rather than the word, so a blogger who knows how many posts they publish each month gets a predictable bill instead of a word-count spreadsheet, and its model is tuned specifically to beat GPTZero, the detector most people are actually up against. In our testing it reliably clears a detector check, and there's a free tier to try it before you pay anything. For steady, low-stakes content, that friction-free experience is the entire appeal.
Simplicity, on purpose
The zero-setting interface is the feature, not a shortcut. There's nothing to learn and no decisions to make at 11pm on a deadline — paste, click, move on — which is exactly why our reviewer kept coming back to it for routine work over six months and a hundred-odd tests. The request-based pricing matches how creators actually work: in tasks, not words. You buy a block of monthly requests (80 on Basic, 200 on Pro, unlimited on Ultra), each with a generous per-request word cap, and you stop thinking about it. The GPTZero-tuned model is the engine under that simplicity, aimed squarely at the detector most readers will run.
What you get
Zero-setting interface
One text field, one button — nothing to configure
Request-based pricing
Pay by the request, not the word — predictable for steady publishing
GPTZero-tuned model
Tuned for the detector most people actually face
Per-request limits
600 words (Basic), 1,200 (Pro), 3,000 (Ultra)
Free to try
A free tier to test it before you commit
ESL-friendly
Particularly good at smoothing non-native English to a clean, neutral read
How it holds up
In our testing WriteHuman clears GPTZero comfortably — it ranged into the high-80s and passed the QuillBot detector too — which is plenty for the everyday content it's built for. Its honest trade is the flip side of its simplicity: with one neutral setting and no controls, the output comes out clean and competent rather than bursting with personality. For an About page, a how-to, a steady stream of straightforward posts, or smoothing non-native English, that's exactly right. For voice-driven creative writing or a persuasive sales email, you'll want a tool with more control — neutral is the only mode here, and that's the deliberate trade. Match the writing to the tool and WriteHuman is a genuinely easy, dependable choice.
Built for steady creators
WriteHuman knows the lane it's good in. The steady blogger publishing a known number of posts a month gets a predictable bill and zero overhead. The ESL writer gets smoothing that makes non-native English read naturally without trying to inject a personality it doesn't need. And the low-stakes creator handling About pages, terms, intros and routine posts gets safe, passable text in a single click. None of them want a power tool — they want paste, click, done, and that's precisely what they get.
The verdict
For the steady blogger who values a predictable bill and zero fuss, the ESL writer who wants clean smoothing, or anyone producing straightforward content that simply needs to pass a detector, WriteHuman is an easy one to reach for — try it free, and the simplicity sells itself. It's not the tool for voice-heavy creative work, where its neutral output flattens the spark. But for the large amount of writing that just needs to be clean, human and done, paste-click-done is a genuinely good way to work.
Writing
Undetectable
Humanization