Better essays.
Your words.
Upload your essay, paper, or personal statement and revise it with AI feedback that shows you what to fix — and teaches you why — but never writes it for you.
Built by a college professor and his son — designed for academic integrity from day one.
Feedback in three steps — revision stays in your hands.
Upload your draft
Word doc, PDF, or plain text — your essay, paper, or personal statement. It parses in your browser and lands in a clean writing editor.
Get honest feedback
Run revision tools on your own words: readability scoring, repetition hunting, wordiness, sentence rhythm, structure. Each finding explains why it matters.
Revise it yourself
You make every change. The tools point at problems and teach the craft principle behind them — like a writing-center tutor with infinite patience.
This is not a ghostwriter. On purpose.
No generate button
There is no way to ask Writer’s Club to write your essay. The tools analyze and explain; they don’t produce paragraphs to paste.
Feedback that teaches
Every flag comes with the craft reason behind it — so the next essay needs less fixing than this one.
Your voice survives
Because you write every sentence, your writing still sounds like you — to your professor, and to anyone else who reads it.
Tools that make essays sharper.
Essay Feedback Coach
Rubric-style feedback on your whole draft — thesis, structure, evidence, clarity, tone, and whether it answers the assignment prompt.
Thesis Clarity Checker
Finds your thesis, scores its clarity and arguability, and asks the questions that lead you to a sharper one.
Academic Tone Analyzer
Flags contractions, colloquialisms, and unhedged claims — with the convention behind each, so it sticks.
Citation Consistency Checker
Flags mixed styles, missing elements, and sources cited but never listed — with a checklist to verify against the official guide.
Argument Flow Mapper
Maps your claim-to-support chain paragraph by paragraph and names the counterargument you haven’t addressed.
Prompt Decoder
Paste the assignment and learn exactly what it’s asking — task verbs, hidden deliverables, and an attack plan — before you write a word.
…plus 50+ more for longer projects, from plot-hole detection to pacing analysis. See the full toolkit →
Assign revision, not prompts.
Writer’s Club was built by an adjunct professor who wanted students to get more feedback than one instructor can give — without outsourcing the writing itself. Students upload their own drafts, see concrete revision targets, and turn in work that is verifiably theirs.
Using it with a class, a writing center, or a whole program? We’re a small family company and we answer our own email — tell us what you need and we’ll make group access simple.
Why instructors like the model
Feedback tools mark what and explain why — students still do the how.
Draft history lives in the project, so the revision process is visible, not a black box.
The Student plan is $9/month, and the free tier is enough to try it on one real assignment.
Asked by every careful student.
Is using this considered cheating?
Writer’s Club gives feedback on writing you’ve already done — the same role a writing-center tutor, peer reviewer, or grammar checker plays. It has no "write my essay" button by design; every word stays yours. That said, academic policies differ, so always follow your instructor’s or institution’s rules on outside feedback.
Will it write or rewrite my essay?
No. The tools analyze, flag, score, and explain. Fixing the writing is deliberately left to you — that’s where the learning happens, and it’s why your voice survives the revision.
What files can I upload?
.docx (Word), .pdf, .txt, and .md, up to 25 MB. Files are parsed in your browser — nothing is uploaded until you choose to save the project to your account.
What does it cost?
A free account includes 10,000 credits — enough to revise several essays — with no card required. The Student plan is $9/month for 80,000 monthly credits and stronger AI models.
Your next draft is your best one.
Free account, 10,000 credits, no card. Upload an essay and see what the feedback looks like on your own writing.