AI Text Cleaner
Strip filler, compare paragraphs and protect key terms, all in your browser.
An AI text cleaner gives a rough draft a clear-headed editorial pass without sending a word to a server. Paste your text, pick how hard the pass pushes, and it strips the stock filler like "it is important to note that", flags the sentences that run too long, and shows every paragraph before and after so nothing gets quietly reworded. Name a main topic and a list of protected terms, product names, record types, anything that has to survive, and it checks they are still there after the edit. It will not bypass an AI detector and it cannot manufacture expertise. What it does is hand you a tighter draft to review, so a human still adds the real facts, the examples and the final voice.
100% in your browser. Nothing you type ever leaves this page.
Local clarity and editorial cleanup workbench
You know the draft. Almost there, but buried under "it is important to note that" and a good three sentences of throat-clearing before it gets to the point. That's what this is for. Paste it, tell me how hard to push, and I'll strip the filler and flag the sentences that just won't end. Detector bypass? No. Honestly I think those are a bit of a con anyway. Nothing leaves your browser either, so relax.
Local editing pass. That's the whole job. I'll catch the obvious filler and poke at the spots where the writing drags. The facts and the examples? The voice that makes it yours? Still on you.
What an AI text cleaner should improve before publishing
An AI text cleaner is worth reaching for when a draft already says something real but you have to dig for it. The point sits behind soft verbs and the same setup line written out twice. A paragraph that makes the reader wait. You see it most in generated copy, then in notes dashed off too fast. Intros, too, the ones written before anyone decided what the page was answering. Good bones, terrible packaging. So treat cleanup as a review pass, not a magic wand. It trims the stock filler and logs every change so nothing sneaks past you. Paragraphs go side by side. Then it tells you whether your topic and protected terms survived. A cleaner draft still needs the right facts, real examples, links that go somewhere, and a reason for a stranger to trust you.
How to clean text without sanding away the useful parts
The rule is simple. Start with the lightest pass that fixes the problem, then stop. A help label usually just wants direct verbs and fewer maybes. A technical paragraph wants its terms left alone and the rest made easier to scan. An SEO intro wants the search intent up front, not the same keyword five times in a row. The test was never whether a sentence sounds polished sitting on its own. It is whether a real person reaches the useful bit sooner.
- Clarity pass is the default. It pulls the obvious filler and otherwise keeps its hands off your structure.
- Concise pass leans harder on the long windups and the padding words. Reach for it when a draft is genuinely bloated.
- Technical help copy chases the next action while keeping your terms somewhere you can eyeball them.
- SEO intro pass tells you if the topic shows up early, without drowning the intro in keyword soup.
- Protected terms are the guardrail. Product names, record types, whatever absolutely has to survive the edit.
A practical editorial workflow after the cleanup
- Read the cleaned paragraph next to the original. Bin any edit that shifts the meaning, since some of the swaps will be plain wrong.
- If a paragraph still reads thin once the filler is gone, that is your cue to drop in a concrete example.
- Verify the facts and the product names. The links. The screenshots. All of it, before anything goes public.
- Read your first paragraph alone. It should tell the right person why they should care, right now.
- The final voice pass goes to a human, especially on anything carrying advice, or trust, or your brand's tone.
Clearer writing is not a shortcut around usefulness
Since the whole tool is about clear writing, let me be blunt. Clean prose helps people follow a guide. It cannot manufacture the guide. It will not hand you first-hand examples or honest limitations, will not write the links that move someone forward, and it definitely will not grow the editorial nerve to cut a thin section. So a page that still feels generic after a cleanup pass does not need another round of synonyms. It needs more substance.
Frequently asked questions
Does this tool humanize text to bypass AI detectors?
No. And I won't pretend otherwise. I built it to make writing clearer and easier to review, that's the entire pitch. It won't dodge a detector. It won't hide who wrote what, and it can't hand you quality you didn't put in yourself.
Why show paragraph comparisons?
Because a rewrite can read smoother and still quietly drop a condition, or a term, or some bit of nuance you actually needed. I've watched it happen more than once. Two versions side by side is just the easiest way to catch it before it bites.
What does an AI text cleaner remove?
All the junk that hitches a ride when you paste from somewhere else. Smart quotes. Non-breaking spaces, zero-width characters, those sneaky doubled spaces nobody notices, leftover markdown. What lands back in your editor is plain text that behaves itself.
Is my text sent to a server?
Never. The whole thing runs in your browser. So paste whatever you want. A confidential draft, an unpublished post, raw client notes. None of it leaves your machine.