AI Text Generator

Generate ready-to-paste text in 12 formats: paragraphs, tweets, SMS, meta descriptions, ad copy, and more.

0 / 500
Tone (pick one)
How it works

The AI Text Generator takes a topic or brief plus a format (Paragraph, Blog intro, Tweet, SMS, Email subject line, Ad copy, Meta description, Outline, and several others), plus a tone, and returns one generated variant tuned to the format's character constraints. The output is produced by a large language model that gets the format's sweet-spot length, hard limit, and structural template baked into its prompt, so the first draft tends to land in the right shape rather than needing manual trimming.

What you can adjust:

  • Format, picks the character range and structural template. Tweet caps at 280 hard; SMS at 160; Email subject at 60; Meta description targets 120-160. Outline format returns newline-separated bullets instead of prose.
  • Tone, one of 15 (Standard, Formal, Casual, Concise, Expanded, Confident, Friendly, Persuasive, Witty, Empathetic, Bold, Academic, Storytelling, Urgent, Inspirational). Each tone changes structure and word choice together.
  • Focus keyword (optional), preserved in the output when possible. The live preview under the input also surfaces real Keywords Everywhere data (monthly search volume, CPC, competition) so you can see if you are targeting a phrase anyone actually searches for.

Per-card Regenerate re-rolls a fresh angle for the same (format, tone, focus-keyword) combination without resubmitting the form. Each Regenerate is a separate AI call that consumes from the same daily token budget.

Honest framing. AI-generated text is recognizable by AI-detection tools, plagiarism checkers, and academic-integrity systems regardless of how the output was paraphrased. Treat the variant as a draft starting point: edit it in the card, swap in your own specifics, and run a human review pass before publishing.

Plan caps. Each call consumes a portion of your shared daily AI token budget. The budget is shared across every AI tool on this site. Free: 50 tokens/day; Bronze 100; Silver 200; Gold 400; Platinum 1,000. The quota chip shows your real-time remaining count.

What you will see
Topic / brief
The thing you want text about. A short sentence ("the benefits of bamboo toothbrushes for eco-conscious shoppers") works better than a single word ("toothbrushes"). Up to 500 characters.
Format
Grouped into Long-form (paragraph, blog intro, blog section), Short-form (tweet, SMS, email subject), Marketing copy (ad copy, product description, social caption, meta description, email body), and Outline. Each format carries a min/max char range and an optional hard limit (tweet, SMS, subject line). The character counter on the result card uses these ranges to color-code the variant green / amber / red.
Focus keyword
An optional phrase the output should include. The live preview under the input runs a Keywords Everywhere lookup so you can see monthly volume, CPC, and competition before submitting; the result card shows a Keyword-present pill afterwards.
Tone
One of 15 styles. The same prompt with a different tone produces noticeably different output (Casual versus Academic, Persuasive versus Concise).
Generated variant card
An editable textarea with the generated text, plus a per-card character counter, word count, Flesch reading-ease score, Copy and Regenerate buttons. The character counter compares against the format's constraints and updates as you edit.
Recent generations
The last 10 submissions, kept locally in your browser for 30 days. Click any entry to reopen its share URL.
Frequently asked questions

How do I generate text with this tool?

Type a topic or brief in the box (up to 500 characters), pick a format from the dropdown (Paragraph, Blog Introduction, Blog Section, Tweet, SMS Message, Email Subject Line, Email Body, Ad Copy, Product Description, Social Media Caption, Meta Description, or Outline), pick a tone (15 options), optionally add a focus keyword you want included, and click Generate text. You get one variant tuned to the format's character constraints. Hit Regenerate on the card to re-roll without resubmitting.

Why does the format dropdown control character limits?

Different destinations have different limits. A tweet must fit in 280 characters or it will not post; an SMS over 160 characters gets billed as two messages; an email subject line over 60 characters truncates on most clients; a meta description outside the 120-160 range may not render the way Google previews. The format you pick tells the model exactly what budget to write to, AND drives the green/amber/red color states on the character counter so you can see at a glance whether the variant fits where you are pasting.

What is the best way to use AI for writing?

Treat the AI output as a draft starting point, not a finished product. The most useful workflow is: ask the model for a specific piece in the specific format you need (which is what this tool is structured around), edit the variant in the card to swap in your own specifics and tighten the language, and run the result through a human review pass before publishing. The model is good at structure and on-brand tone; you are better at facts, taste, and audience fit.

Which AI is best for content generation?

For short structured outputs (the kind this tool generates: tweets, meta descriptions, ad copy, paragraphs) most modern large language models produce comparable results. The bigger lever is the prompt: a tool that bakes in the format constraints, the tone instruction, and the character budget tends to produce better first drafts than chat-style prompting in a generic interface. For long-form content (full articles, multi-section guides) a tool like our Outline Generator paired with manual writing usually beats a single end-to-end generation.

Will AI-generated text be detected by plagiarism or AI checkers?

Yes, almost always. AI-generated text has statistical signatures that detection tools like GPTZero, Originality.ai, and Turnitin's AI checker can recognize, regardless of how the text was paraphrased afterwards. Use this tool for legitimate purposes: marketing copy where the byline is the brand, internal drafts you will rewrite, A/B variations, ESL phrasing improvement. Do not use it to evade attribution in academic submissions or anywhere an AI-content disclosure would be expected.

Is it illegal to publish work written by AI?

Not generally illegal, but the rules vary by context. The US Copyright Office has stated that AI-only-generated works are not eligible for copyright, so you cannot register pure-AI text as your own copyrighted work. Many publishers and academic institutions require disclosure of AI assistance. Some platforms (notably Amazon's KDP) require AI-generated content to be flagged at upload. For commercial marketing copy or internal drafts the legal exposure is minimal; for academic submissions, news articles, and creative work that will be sold, check the venue's disclosure rules first.

What is the 10/20/70 rule for AI?

A common heuristic in AI-assisted writing: 10% of your effort goes into prompting (telling the AI what you want), 20% into editing the AI output, and 70% into the human creative and strategic work the AI cannot do (deciding what to write about, what claims to make, what examples to use, how it fits your overall content strategy). This tool is designed for that 10% step: a tightly-prompted format-specific request that lands a usable draft, so you can spend more of your time on the 70%.

How many generations do I get per day?

Each generation uses a small number of AI tokens (typically 1-3 depending on output length). The daily token budget is shared across every AI tool on this site (Sentence Rewriter, AI Summarizer, Grammar Checker, Paragraph Generator, Hook Generator, and more), so the same bucket covers all of them. Free plan: 50 tokens/day. Bronze: 100, Silver: 200, Gold: 400, Platinum: 1,000. The quota chip on the page shows your real-time remaining count after every generation.