Do colleges check essays for AI?
Some do, some don't — and most are deliberately vague about it. There is no single industry policy. A portion of admissions offices have tested AI-detection tools; others lean entirely on experienced readers, interviews, and the consistency of your overall application to judge authenticity.
What's nearly universal is that essays are read by people. Admissions officers process enormous volumes of writing every season, and they develop a strong instinct for prose that says a lot of words while revealing nothing personal. That instinct, more than any software, is what an AI-written essay runs into.
Which tools they use
When colleges do screen, they typically reach for the same commercial detectors available to everyone: Turnitin's AI indicator (where their systems integrate it), and standalone web checkers. None of these are admissions-specific; they're general-purpose tools repurposed for the task.
Because these are the same tools students can access, you can preview roughly how your essay reads to them. That's the logic behind a pre-submission self-check — not to game a system, but to catch passages that sound machine-generated.
How reliable are these checks?
Not reliable enough to stand alone, which the tools' own makers acknowledge. AI detectors are known to false-positive on formal, structured prose and on writing by non-native English speakers — and a polished college essay is often exactly that kind of writing.
This is why thoughtful admissions offices don't reject based on a score. A false positive on a hardworking applicant is a far worse outcome than missing one AI-assisted essay, so the burden of proof stays high and human.
AI check vs plagiarism check
These measure different things and are easy to confuse. A plagiarism check compares your text against existing sources and flags matching passages. An AI check estimates whether the writing was machine-generated, based on statistical patterns — not on matching any source.
So a clean plagiarism report tells you nothing about your AI score, and vice versa. AI-generated text is usually original (it isn't copied from anywhere), which is precisely why plagiarism tools miss it and separate AI detectors exist.
If you used AI to brainstorm
Using AI to brainstorm topics, outline structure, or talk through what makes your story meaningful is generally lower-risk than submitting AI-written prose — and many counselors consider it legitimate, similar to talking ideas through with a teacher.
The line most schools care about is authorship of the final words. If the sentences in your essay are yours, written and revised by you, you're on solid ground. If whole paragraphs came out of a chatbot, you're not, regardless of whether a detector catches it.
Pre-submission self-check
Before you submit, read the essay aloud and run it through an AI checker. The read-aloud test catches stiff, unnatural rhythm; the checker flags passages that pattern-match to AI. Where they agree, revise.
Keep your drafts and version history too. If your authorship is ever questioned, a document edit timeline is far more persuasive than arguing about a percentage.
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Experimentar o AI Killer →Perguntas frequentes
Can colleges tell if you used ChatGPT?
They can run detectors that estimate it, but they cannot prove it from a score alone. Generic phrasing and a lack of personal detail are bigger giveaways to experienced human readers.
Is it cheating to use AI for college essays?
Most schools prohibit submitting AI-written application content. Using AI to brainstorm or proofread is usually treated differently from generating the essay itself — but check each school's stated policy.
⚠️ As pontuações de detecção de IA são sinais probabilísticos e não são 100% precisas. Elas podem sinalizar texto humano como IA. Nunca use uma pontuação como única base para uma acusação de fraude ou má conduta acadêmica.