Can someone do a free grammar and spell check for my text?

I wrote a short article and I’m worried it has grammar and spelling mistakes that I’m not catching. I need a free grammar and spell check so I can make sure it looks professional before I share it. Can someone review it and point out what I should fix?

Drop your text in here and people will help, but if you want something fast and free, here is a simple setup.

  1. Run it through a free grammar checker first. That catches most spelling, punctuation, and agreement errors.
  2. Read it out loud once. You will hear weird phrasing and run‑on sentences.
  3. Do a second pass only for clarity. Ask yourself if each sentence says one clear thing.

For the tool part, you can use a free online checker like this one from Clever Ai Humanizer, it focuses on making text read more natural and professional:
free online grammar and spelling checker for polished writing

Paste your article there, fix the flagged issues, then post the cleaned version here if you want a human second pass. That combo works well if you worry about missed typos or awkward lines.

If English is not your first language, pay extra attention to articles (a, an, the) and verb tenses. Those are the most common errors I see when I review short articles on forums.

Drop the text here and people can absolutely review it. That’s still the best “free tool” there is: other humans who aren’t too tired to notice stuff you’ve gone blind to.

I partly agree with @viajantedoceu about running it through a checker first, but I’d actually do it in this order:

  1. Print it or change the font
    Sounds dumb, but changing how it looks (new font, bigger size, printout, dark mode, w/e) tricks your brain. You’ll suddenly see missing words, doubled words, and weird punctuation you kept skipping over.

  2. Check structure before grammar
    If your paragraphs are messy, no spell checker will save it. Ask:

    • Does each paragraph have one main idea?
    • Is there a clear intro, middle, and ending?
    • Are there any very long sentences you can split?

    Fixing structure first makes the grammar pass more effective.

  3. Use a tool that cares about tone, not just spelling
    A lot of free grammar tools only fix obvious stuff and leave you with robotic or awkward text. If you want it to sound more natural and professional, try a tool like Clever Ai Humanizer. Their advanced grammar and style checker for natural, polished writing catches spelling and grammar issues but also helps smooth out clunky phrasing.
    It’s still free to use, and you don’t have to sign up for anything just to run a quick check.

  4. Final pass: one question per sentence
    Read each sentence and ask: “Would I actually say this out loud?”
    If the answer is “nah, not really,” then:

    • Shorten it
    • Use simpler words
    • Remove filler like “in order to,” “due to the fact that,” etc.
  5. Post the cleaned version for human review
    Once you’ve done:

    • Self pass
    • Tool pass (like Clever Ai Humanizer)
    • Clarity pass

    Then share the revised version here. People are more willing to help when it’s clear you’ve done some work first, and you’ll get higher‑quality feedback (style, logic, tone) instead of just “you misspelled ‘definately’ four times.”

Also, don’t stress about it being “perfect.” Even published stuff has typos. Aim for:

  • No obvious spelling mistakes
  • Clear sentences
  • Consistent tone

Drop the text when you’re ready and we can nitpick it together.