Yes – Turnitin does detect AI. Since April 2023, Turnitin has run a dedicated AI-writing detection indicator that estimates how much of a submission was likely generated by tools such as ChatGPT. Crucially, this AI score is separate from the traditional similarity (plagiarism) score: a paper can show 0% similarity and still be flagged as AI-written, or vice versa. This guide explains exactly how Turnitin AI detection works, how accurate it is, whether using ChatGPT counts as plagiarism, what UK universities are doing about it, and how to stay on the right side of academic integrity – including how to check your own work for free before you submit.
The short answer: yes, and it is a separate score
When tutors ask does Turnitin detect AI, what they usually mean is two different questions rolled into one: can the software spot copied text, and can it spot text written by a large language model? Turnitin answers both, but through two distinct systems. The first is the long-standing Similarity Report, which matches your wording against billions of web pages, journal articles and previously submitted student papers. The second, launched in April 2023, is the AI writing detection indicator, which estimates the percentage of your document that was probably produced by generative AI such as ChatGPT, Gemini or Claude.
Because these are separate engines, a 0% similarity score tells you nothing about your AI score, and a low AI score tells you nothing about whether you have paraphrased a source too closely. Understanding the difference is the single most useful thing a student can learn here, so the rest of this guide treats them as two related but independent checks. If you want to understand the similarity side in depth first, our explainer on what counts as plagiarism is the best place to start.
| Feature | Similarity score | AI writing indicator |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Overlap with existing sources (copied or closely paraphrased text) | Likelihood the text was generated by an AI language model |
| Output | A percentage plus highlighted matched passages | A percentage of the document estimated as AI-written |
| Launched | Turnitin’s original product (1998 onwards) | April 2023 |
| Shows matched sources? | Yes – clickable source list | No source list; highlights suspected AI sentences |
| Visible to students? | Often, if the tutor enables it | Usually staff-only by default at most institutions |
| A high score means | Possible poor citation or copying – needs review | Possible undisclosed AI use – needs a conversation, not an automatic verdict |
How Turnitin’s AI detection actually works
Turnitin’s AI detector does not search a database the way the similarity checker does. There is no library of “ChatGPT essays” to match against. Instead, it analyses the statistical fingerprint of your writing. Language models are trained to predict the most probable next word, so AI-generated text tends to be unusually smooth, consistent and predictable. Human writing, by contrast, is “burstier” – we vary sentence length, take detours, make slightly odd word choices and occasionally break our own rhythm.
Two technical concepts sit behind this:
- Perplexity – a measure of how surprised a language model is by the next word. Low perplexity (very predictable text) leans towards AI; high perplexity (more surprising, varied wording) leans towards human.
- Burstiness – the variation in sentence structure and length across a passage. Humans cluster long and short sentences unevenly; AI output is often more uniform.
Turnitin segments your document into overlapping chunks (roughly a few hundred words each), scores every segment for how AI-like it reads, and then aggregates those scores into the overall percentage you see. This is why the indicator highlights specific passages rather than naming a “source” – it is making a probability judgement about style, not finding a copied match. It is also why the AI score and the similarity score can move completely independently of each other.
How accurate is Turnitin AI detection – and where it fails
Turnitin has publicly stated that its detector is tuned for a low false-positive rate, and reports figures in the region of less than 1% of fully human documents being misflagged at the document level. That sounds reassuring, but the honest picture is more nuanced, and you deserve the full version.
No AI detector on the market is perfect, and Turnitin says so itself. The known limitations matter:
- False positives are possible. Some genuinely human writing – especially from non-native English speakers, or formulaic technical and scientific prose – reads as “predictable” and can be over-flagged. Several universities, including in the US, paused or de-emphasised the tool over exactly this concern.
- Short passages are unreliable. Turnitin needs a meaningful amount of text (generally a few hundred words) before it will score, and very short submissions are not assessed.
- Lightly edited AI can slip through. Heavily paraphrased or human-reworked AI text disrupts the statistical pattern, so the score can fall. This is a limitation of the tool – not a strategy to chase. Manipulating text purely to dodge a detector is itself an integrity issue and is no substitute for genuine original work.
- It is a probability, not proof. The percentage is a flag for a human to investigate, not an automatic guilty verdict. Reputable institutions treat it as the start of a conversation.
“Our AI writing detection capabilities are not a determination of misconduct, but rather provide data for educators to make informed decisions based on their academic and institutional policies.” – Turnitin, AI writing detection guidance.
The practical takeaway: a high AI score is evidence that warrants a discussion, not an end-of-story conviction. Equally, a low score is not a green light to submit AI work you have lightly disguised. If you are worried about how your draft reads, you can sanity-check it yourself with a free AI content detector before it ever reaches your tutor.
Does Turnitin detect ChatGPT specifically?
Yes. ChatGPT was the model that triggered Turnitin to build the indicator in the first place, and the detector is designed to catch text from ChatGPT (GPT-3.5, GPT-4 and later), as well as other mainstream models. Because the detector works on statistical style rather than a model-specific signature, it is not limited to one product – but ChatGPT, as the most widely used tool among students, is squarely in scope.
That said, the cat-and-mouse reality is worth stating plainly: as models improve and as students edit output, detection becomes harder. Turnitin updates its detector over time, but no vendor claims 100% accuracy against every model and every editing technique. The responsible conclusion is not “AI is undetectable, so go ahead” – it is “detection is imperfect in both directions, so the only safe footing is using AI within the rules and being able to show your own work.”
1. Raw ChatGPT output (high AI risk, not your voice): “Climate change represents a multifaceted global challenge that necessitates comprehensive and coordinated international action across multiple sectors and stakeholder groups.”
2. Unethical “disguising” (still not original work – do not do this): “Climate change is a many-sided worldwide challenge that requires broad, coordinated global action across lots of sectors and stakeholders.” (Reworded to dodge a detector, but the thinking is still the model’s, not yours – this is still an integrity breach.)
3. Legitimate, original use (this is the goal): “Drawing on Stern (2007), this essay argues that climate policy fails when it is treated as a purely environmental problem. The chapters that follow test that claim against UK transport and housing data.” (Your argument, your sources, your structure – AI may have helped you brainstorm the outline, but the analysis is yours.)
Is using ChatGPT plagiarism?
This is the question that matters most, and the answer is “it depends on how you use it and what your university’s policy says.” Plagiarism, in the classic sense, means presenting someone else’s words or ideas as your own without acknowledgement. AI complicates this because the output is not technically taken from another person – but most institutions now treat submitting AI-generated text as your own as a form of academic misconduct, often labelled separately as “unauthorised use of AI” or contract-cheating-adjacent behaviour rather than plagiarism in the narrow sense.
Here is the honest, balanced breakdown:
- Submitting AI text as your own: almost always a breach. Passing off ChatGPT’s words and reasoning as your independent work violates the spirit of every academic-integrity policy, whether your institution calls it plagiarism or a separate AI-misuse offence.
- Using AI to brainstorm, outline or explain a concept: often permitted, sometimes encouraged – but only if your final writing and analysis are genuinely yours. Many tutors are happy for you to ask ChatGPT to clarify a theory, then write the assignment in your own words.
- Using AI to translate, fix grammar or restructure your own sentences: a grey area that varies enormously by course. Some accept it as an accessibility aid; others treat heavy use as undisclosed assistance.
- The non-negotiable: check your specific module handbook and university policy, and when in doubt, disclose. A one-line note (“I used ChatGPT to brainstorm the structure; all analysis and writing are my own”) is the difference between transparency and a misconduct case.
To understand where AI use sits alongside the more familiar offences, our guide to the different types of plagiarism is a useful companion – undisclosed AI is increasingly listed as its own category in university regulations.
What UK universities are doing about AI
There is no single national rule. Each institution sets its own policy, and the sector has moved quickly. Broadly, three approaches have emerged:
- Restrictive: AI tools are banned in assessed work unless explicitly permitted, and undisclosed use is treated as misconduct.
- Permitted with disclosure: students may use AI for defined tasks (brainstorming, language support) provided they declare it and the substantive work is their own.
- AI-integrated assessment: some courses now design assignments that assume AI access and assess the student’s critical judgement, editing and verification skills on top of the output.
On the detection side, the picture is mixed. Many UK universities run Turnitin’s AI indicator but explicitly state that the score alone cannot prove misconduct – it must be corroborated by other evidence such as drafts, version history, a viva (oral defence) or stylistic inconsistencies. Some institutions have deliberately switched the indicator off, precisely because they do not want staff treating a percentage as proof. The QAA (Quality Assurance Agency) and Russell Group universities have published guidance emphasising AI literacy and assessment redesign over a detection arms race.
For you as a student, the implication is simple: do not assume your university’s stance – read it. The policy that governs your degree is the one printed in your own handbook, not a headline about a different institution.
How to stay safe: use AI ethically and check your work
You do not need to fear Turnitin if you are doing genuine academic work. The students who run into trouble are almost always those who hand in work that is not really theirs. Here is how to stay firmly on the right side of the line.
Write in your own voice
The most durable protection is also the most obvious: do the thinking and the writing yourself. When your argument, your structure and your sources are genuinely yours, both the similarity score and the AI score look after themselves. If you use AI to understand a concept, close the tab and write the section from memory and notes – not by copying its phrasing. If you struggle with paraphrasing fairly, our walkthrough on how to paraphrase properly shows how to restate ideas in your own words while still crediting the source.
Cite sources and disclose AI use
Proper referencing is your strongest defence against the similarity score, and disclosure is your strongest defence on the AI side. Quote sparingly and accurately, cite every borrowed idea, and follow your required style to the letter – our Harvard referencing guide and general guide on how to cite sources cover the mechanics. If your course permits AI for any task, add a short disclosure line. Transparency converts a potential misconduct case into a non-issue.
Check your work before you submit
You cannot see your own blind spots, which is why checking is sensible even when you have written everything yourself – an over-quoted paragraph or an accidentally close paraphrase can lift your similarity score without any intent to cheat. Run your draft through our free plagiarism checker to catch unintentional overlaps (it handles up to 3,000 words per check), and use the AI detector to see how AI-like your writing reads. If a passage flags, the fix is legitimate revision – rewrite it in your own words, add the missing citation, or cut the over-quoting. For a step-by-step cleanup process, see our guide on how to remove plagiarism, and if you rely on rewriting tools, our review of the best paraphrasing tools explains which ones support genuine restatement rather than word-swapping.
For high-stakes work like a dissertation, a basic web check may not be enough. Our full report – built on the same technology as Turnitin – covers both a Turnitin-level similarity analysis and AI writing detection in one place, so you see what your university will see before they see it. You can read more about the detailed plagiarism report and what it includes.
Check how AI-like your writing reads – free
Run your draft through our free AI detector to spot passages that read as machine-generated, then revise in your own voice before you submit.
The bottom line
Does Turnitin detect AI? Yes – through a dedicated AI-writing indicator that sits alongside, but separate from, the familiar similarity score. Does it detect ChatGPT? Yes, though detection is probabilistic and imperfect in both directions, which is exactly why no university should treat a percentage as proof and no student should treat a low score as permission. Is using ChatGPT plagiarism? Submitting its work as your own almost always breaches academic integrity; using it to brainstorm within your university’s rules usually does not. The honest, durable strategy is the same one that has always worked: do your own thinking, cite properly, disclose where required, and check your draft before you hand it in.