GPTypo now supports 2,000-word scans on Pro
Doubled the word limit. What it means for academic writing.
When we launched GPTypo Pro, the per-scan word limit was 1,000 words. That worked for blog posts and short essays, but academic use cases weren't being met. A typical paper section runs 1,500-2,500 words, and splitting it into chunks meant losing context that affects detection accuracy.
What changed
Pro users can now scan up to 2,000 words per scan. This covers most paper sections, executive summaries, and long-form blog posts in a single pass.
The change applies immediately to all existing Pro subscribers. No action needed. Your monthly word allowance (100,000 words) remains the same, so you can run at least 50 full-length scans per month.
Why context matters
AI detection is context-dependent. A sentence that looks AI-generated in isolation might score as human when the detector can see the surrounding paragraphs. Longer scans give our detection model more context to work with, which means more accurate scores and fewer false positives. This matters most for academic writing, where formal conventions can trigger false positives on individual sentences that would be correctly classified with more context.
Team tier
If 2,000 words still isn't enough, the Team plan supports 5,000 words per scan, enough for most full papers. Team also includes API access, batch scanning, and PDF reports for institutional use. See the full plan comparison for details.
What's next
We're continuing to improve detection accuracy, especially for academic and technical writing. If you have feedback on word limits or feature requests, reach out on X at @gptypo.