To reduce your Turnitin similarity score legitimately, you genuinely improve the originality of your work: paraphrase sources in your own words and sentence structure, quote sparingly and cite every source correctly, remove unnecessary quotations, and configure the report to exclude your bibliography and quoted material — then re-check before you submit. This guide explains exactly how to lower your similarity score the right way, shows a real before-and-after rewrite, and warns against the “tricks” that count as academic misconduct.
What your Turnitin similarity score actually means
Before you try to reduce anything, it helps to understand what the number represents. Turnitin’s similarity score is the percentage of your submitted text that matches sources in its databases — published journals, books, websites, and previously submitted student papers. It is a matching tool, not a plagiarism verdict. A 25% score is not an accusation; it simply tells your tutor that a quarter of your wording overlaps with existing text, and a human then decides whether that overlap is properly attributed or not.
This distinction matters because the goal is never to hit some magic low number. Correctly quoted and cited material legitimately raises your score, and that is fine. What you are reducing is unoriginal, unattributed or clumsily paraphrased text — the kind that signals you have leaned too heavily on your sources instead of building your own argument. If you understand what plagiarism is and how it is detected, every method below makes intuitive sense.
There is no universal “safe” percentage. Many UK departments treat anything under 15–20% as broadly unremarkable, but a 5% score that is entirely one unquoted lifted paragraph is far worse than a 30% score made up of properly cited quotations spread thinly across a long literature review. Always read your own course handbook — the threshold and the academic-integrity policy are set locally.
Honest reduction vs. cheating: the line you must not cross
There is a large, well-indexed corner of the internet promising to help you “beat”, “bypass” or “fool” Turnitin. Avoid all of it. These methods do not improve your work — they disguise unoriginal text — and modern detection catches them routinely. Worse, getting caught using them is treated as deliberate academic misconduct, which is penalised far more harshly than ordinary poor referencing.
Here is what those manipulation tricks look like, and why they fail:
- Character swapping (homoglyphs): replacing Latin letters with visually identical Cyrillic or Greek characters so words no longer “match”. Turnitin flags unusual character sets, and the document reads as gibberish to a screen reader or copy-paste.
- Hidden or white text: inserting invisible words, or shrinking text to 1pt. Turnitin reads the underlying document, not what is visible on screen, so it sees everything.
- Macros and “fake” spaces: swapping real spaces for non-breaking or zero-width characters. These leave a forensic fingerprint that is trivial to detect.
- Citation-as-camouflage: dumping fabricated references to pad the bibliography. Markers check sources, and fabrication is itself misconduct.
- AI “spinners” and word-shufflers: automated tools that swap synonyms to dodge matching. They produce unreadable text, often trip AI-writing detectors, and — crucially — do not make the work yours.
“Text-manipulation tactics such as replacing characters, using hidden text or relying on automated paraphrasing tools are forms of academic misconduct and are detectable.” — paraphrased from Turnitin’s published guidance on similarity and misconduct.
Everything in the rest of this guide does the opposite: it makes your writing more genuinely your own, which lowers the matched percentage as a natural side-effect. That is the only kind of reduction worth doing — and the only kind your university will respect.
Seven legitimate ways to lower your similarity score
The methods below are ordered roughly by impact. Most students who bring a 40%+ score down to a comfortable range do it by combining the first three: paraphrasing properly, trimming over-quotation, and fixing the report settings. Work through them in order.
1. Paraphrase properly — in your own words and structure
The single biggest source of avoidable similarity is patchwriting: copying a source sentence and changing only a few words. Turnitin matches strings of consecutive words, so swapping the odd synonym while keeping the original sentence shape leaves long matched runs intact. Genuine paraphrasing means reading a passage, closing the source, and re-expressing the idea from your own understanding — different vocabulary and a different sentence structure — then citing it. Our guide on how to paraphrase walks through the technique step by step, and if you want to compare tools, we review the best paraphrasing tools (used as drafting aids, not auto-rewriters).
2. Quote sparingly, and only when the exact words matter
Direct quotations match 100% by definition. They are legitimate — with quotation marks and a citation — but if a quarter of your essay is quoted, your score will be high and your own voice will be missing. Reserve quotations for cases where the precise wording is the point: a legal definition, a memorable phrase, or a claim you intend to analyse word-by-word. Everything else should be paraphrased.
3. Remove unnecessary quotes and replace them with analysis
Go through every quotation and ask: “do I need these exact words, or just the idea?” Most can be paraphrased. Better still, after presenting a source’s point, add a sentence of your own analysis — why it matters, how it connects to your argument, where it falls short. Original analysis is unmatchable text, so it lowers your percentage and strengthens your grade at the same time.
4. Cite correctly so matches are attributed, not flagged as copied
Correct citation does not reduce the raw match, but it changes how a marker reads it: an attributed match is acceptable scholarship; an unattributed one is plagiarism. Use your required style consistently (Harvard, APA, MLA, etc.) and reference every paraphrase as well as every quote. If referencing trips you up, our how to cite guide and referencing guides cover the major styles. Citing as you write — not at the end — prevents the accidental omissions that turn into integrity cases.
5. Exclude the bibliography and quoted material in the report settings
This is the fastest legitimate win, and most students miss it. Turnitin’s Similarity Report has built-in filters. Your reference list and bibliography will always match other papers (everyone cites the same sources), and properly marked quotations match by design. Turning on “Exclude Bibliography” and “Exclude Quotes” strips this expected, harmless overlap so the report reflects only your prose. Where your tutor controls the settings, ask them to enable these filters — it is standard practice and changes nothing about your actual writing.
6. Rewrite patchwritten passages from scratch
When a checker highlights a paragraph as a long match, do not nibble at it word by word — that is how patchwriting happens. Read the source, set it aside, and write the paragraph again in your own words, then cite it. Rewriting from a blank line forces genuine originality far more reliably than editing the matched text in place. Our guide on how to remove plagiarism shows this rewrite-from-scratch method in detail.
7. Add your own argument, evidence and synthesis
A high similarity score is often a symptom of a deeper problem: the work is a summary of sources rather than an argument of your own. The most durable fix is to write more original content — your interpretation, your synthesis of conflicting findings, your worked examples, your critique. The more of the essay that is genuinely yours, the lower the matched percentage falls, because original thought cannot match anything in the database.
Which methods move the needle most
Not every technique has the same effect. The table below summarises the legitimate methods, their typical impact on the score, and the effort involved — so you can prioritise.
| Method | Typical impact on score | Effort | Improves your grade too? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exclude bibliography & quotes in settings | High (instant) | Very low | No (cosmetic, but legitimate) |
| Proper paraphrasing (own words & structure) | High | Medium | Yes |
| Removing unnecessary quotations | Medium–High | Low | Yes |
| Rewriting patchwritten passages | High (on flagged sections) | Medium–High | Yes |
| Adding original analysis & synthesis | Medium (dilutes matched %) | High | Yes (most of all) |
| Correct, consistent citation | Low on raw % (but reframes matches as legitimate) | Low | Yes |
| Character-swapping / hidden text “tricks” | ⛔ Misconduct — do not use | — | No (penalised) |
The legitimate reduction workflow at a glance
Put together, the methods above form a simple, repeatable workflow. Run through it once for a first draft, then again after each round of edits until your score settles into your department’s acceptable range.
Worked example: a high-match paragraph, rewritten
Theory is easy; the rewrite is where students struggle. Below is a realistic before-and-after. The “before” is patchwritten — a source sentence with a few synonyms swapped — which Turnitin matches almost entirely. The “after” is genuinely paraphrased and cited, so the matched run collapses.
Source (original): “Social media platforms have fundamentally transformed the way adolescents communicate, shaping their identities and influencing their mental health in significant ways.”
Before — patchwriting (≈90% match, flagged): Social media platforms have fundamentally changed the way teenagers communicate, shaping their identities and affecting their mental health in significant ways.
Why it fails: the sentence structure is identical and only three words changed, so Turnitin matches almost the entire string.
After — genuine paraphrase with citation (negligible match): Because so much adolescent interaction now happens through online networks, researchers argue these platforms do more than carry messages — they actively help young people construct a sense of self, with measurable consequences for wellbeing (Smith, 2021).
Why it works: the idea is preserved, but the vocabulary, order and framing are the student’s own, the claim is attributed, and a short analytical clause is added. No long string survives to match.
Notice that the rewrite is also better writing: it adds a reason, a nuance (“do more than carry messages”) and a citation. That is the pattern to aim for — lower similarity is a by-product of stronger, more original scholarship.
Re-check before you submit — don’t guess
Once you have paraphrased, trimmed quotes and fixed your settings, verify the result before the deadline rather than finding out from your tutor. Run your draft through our free plagiarism checker for a quick web-based originality scan of up to 3,000 words — it is a fast way to catch a paragraph you forgot to rewrite. For a thorough pre-submission check on a full dissertation or thesis, our full plagiarism report is built on the same technology as Turnitin and returns a Turnitin-level similarity report (and also screens for AI-generated writing), so you see what your university will see before you hand it in.
If you are also worried about AI-writing flags — a separate metric from similarity — our AI detector assesses how much of your text reads as machine-generated. Knowing both numbers before submission removes the guesswork. And remember the goal of re-checking is to find and genuinely fix remaining problems, not to chase a cosmetic number; if a section still matches, rewrite it properly rather than reaching for a trick.
Check your work free before you submit
Scan up to 3,000 words for matched text in minutes — then fix what’s flagged, the honest way.
Common mistakes that keep scores high
Even students acting in good faith leave easy percentage points on the table. Watch for these:
- Synonym-swapping instead of rewriting: changing words but not structure — the patchwriting trap.
- Leaving the bibliography in the report: reference lists always match; exclude them in settings.
- Over-quoting out of caution: ironically, fear of plagiarism leads to too many quotes, which match 100%.
- Forgetting to cite paraphrases: a paraphrase still needs a citation; without one it reads as your own claim.
- Reusing your own past work: self-plagiarism matches your earlier submission and is a real integrity issue — see the types of plagiarism.
- Checking only once, too late: leaving the originality check until the night before leaves no time to rewrite.
When to get a human to help
Sometimes a high score reflects writing that needs a careful, ethical second pair of eyes — not a rewrite tool. If you have paraphrased and still can’t get a section to read as your own, a qualified academic editor can show you how to restructure and reference it correctly without crossing into ghost-writing. Our proofreading and editing service works on language, structure and referencing so the originality comes from you, properly supported. Used this way — to learn, not to outsource — professional editing is fully compatible with academic integrity.
The bottom line: a lower Turnitin similarity score is the reward for genuinely better, more original work. Paraphrase from understanding, quote with purpose, cite everything, set the report up correctly, and re-check before you submit. Do that and the number takes care of itself — honestly, and in a way no marker can fault.