Humanize AI text —
in your voice, not a generic one.
Everyone can tell when an email came straight out of ChatGPT. The em-dashes, the tidy three-part sentences, the “I hope this finds you well.” AI humanizer tools promise to fix that, but most of them just swap one generic voice for another — casual instead of corporate, still not you.
Shlokah takes a different approach. It measures how you specifically write — from real emails, messages, and notes you choose to share — and rewrites AI text to match your rhythm, your vocabulary, and your quirks. Every rewrite comes with a style score computed against your own writing, so you can see how close it is before you hit send.
0/1200 · at least 40 characters
0/2500 · at least 150 characters
Free · no signup · 3 demos per day
How to humanize AI text with Shlokah
1. Share how you write
Paste a few past emails, WhatsApp messages, or notes you actually wrote. No accounts to connect, nothing scraped.
2. We measure your style
Sentence rhythm, vocabulary, punctuation habits, greetings and sign-offs — computed from your writing, not guessed.
3. Paste AI text, get it back as you
Every rewrite is checked against your real writing and revised until it matches, with a style score to prove it.
Generic humanizers vs. writing in your own voice
A typical AI humanizer applies the same transformation to everyone’s text: shorter sentences, contractions, a sprinkle of informality. The output passes a vibe check, but a colleague who knows your writing will still sense something is off — because the voice belongs to the tool, not to you.
Shlokah doesn’t have a house style to impose. If you write long, winding sentences with semicolons, your rewrites will too. If you sign off every email with “cheers” and never use exclamation marks, that’s what comes back. The target is always the same: text a colleague would believe you typed yourself.
| Typical AI humanizer | Shlokah | |
|---|---|---|
| Target voice | One generic “natural” tone for everyone | Your measured personal style |
| Learns from | Nothing about you | Emails, chats, and notes you choose to share |
| Quality check | None, or a self-reported claim | Style score computed against your real writing |
| Goal | Sound “not like AI” | Sound like you, specifically |
Frequently asked questions
Is there a free AI humanizer with no signup?
Yes — the demo at the top of this page. Paste AI text plus one real thing you wrote, and get the rewrite in your voice instantly: no account, no credit card, 3 demos per day. Your sample is used only for that rewrite and never stored.
What does it mean to humanize AI text?
Humanizing AI text means rewriting output from tools like ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini so it reads like a real person wrote it — removing the telltale patterns like formulaic transitions, uniform sentence lengths, and stock phrases such as “it's important to note.”
How is Shlokah different from other AI humanizers?
Most humanizer tools rewrite AI text into a generic casual tone — human, but not yours. Shlokah first measures your personal writing style from samples you provide (emails, chats, notes), then rewrites AI text to match that style specifically, and scores each rewrite against your real writing.
Is there a free way to try it?
Yes. You get 3 free generations or rewrites in your own voice with no credit card required. Paid plans start at $19/month for 300 generations.
Is it a tool for cheating AI detectors?
No. Shlokah is not built to deceive detectors or readers, and our terms prohibit using it for academic work where AI assistance is banned. It exists so the writing you send under your name actually sounds like you.
What happens to the writing samples I upload?
They stay private to your account. We don't sell your writing, use it to train models, or show it to anyone else, and you can delete your samples and style profile at any time.
Hear the difference in your own voice
Paste one AI draft you’d never send. Get it back sounding like you — 3 free rewrites, no card required.
Humanize your first draftCurious how the style measurement works? Read how Shlokah measures your voice or see why prompting ChatGPT alone falls short