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  • Blog > Applications

Do colleges check for AI in application essays? (And how to use AI the right way)

Picture of Austin Gorman

Austin Gorman

  • May 29, 2026

Wondering if colleges check for AI in application essays? Short answer: not really. Well, at least most aren’t.

A recent review of the top 30 U.S. universities reveals inconsistencies: roughly 70% of schools have no formal AI policy, 7% restrict it completely, while another 27% allow restricted use, usually for brainstorming or editing (but not drafting).

Here’s the Top 30 American Universities AI policies:

Limited AI allowedAI Not AllowedNo official AI policy
Caltech, Cornell, Vanderbilt, Carnegie Mellon, Washington University, Emory, University of VirginiaBrown, GeorgetownPrinceton, MIT, Harvard, Stanford, Yale, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, University of Pennsylvania, University of Chicago, Columbia, Dartmouth, UCLA, University of California Berkeley, Rice, Notre Dame, University of Michigan, University of North Carolina, University of Southern California, University of California San Diego, New York University

How are universities upholding AI policies?

Most colleges aren’t running your essay through an AI detector. They recognize the problems with them — false positives and inconsistencies. Take the em dash we just used. That punctuation alone is enough to deliver an “artificially generated” verdict, even though I just wrote it with my own minuscule human brain.

So no, your essay probably isn’t going through a software scan. But before you breathe a sigh of relief and pop open ChatGPT, know this: the detector was never the real worry. The people reading your essay are.

Empowerly counselor Brennan Bowen, who’s spent years working with students on their essays, didn’t mince words when it came to AI-generated essays.

“If a student used AI to generate their essay,” he explained, “I’m going to pass on their application. It’s going to be a hard no from me.”

This raises an obvious question. If readers aren’t using AI detectors, how do they know? How do they flag an essay as AI?

Simple, it doesn’t pass the sniff test.

Readers don’t need a tool to tell them something’s off. They’ve read thousands of essays, and most AI writing doesn’t sound like a flesh-and-blood seventeen-year-old wrote it. AI leans on cliches and recycled buzzwords — “rich tapestry,” “pivotal,” and the dreaded “leverage.”

It also has a distinct rhythm. An even cadence of 12–18 words per sentence.

But wait, isn’t that just good writing? Since when were flowery sentences the goal? What happened to clarity?

Fair pushback. And it gets at the real issue around all this AI-in-admissions-essay anxiety. What’s actually at stake is the awkward, unmistakably you edge that gets sanded off by artificial intelligence. You can absolutely use AI to supplement your admissions essays. You can’t (or shouldn’t) use it to write your essays because it replaces your distinct voice.

The rest of this (ahem) essay is about this increasingly thin line: where AI works as a tool instead of a replacement for you.

Can you use AI to help with college essays?

Yes, you can. And honestly, unless you’re a genuine Jane Austen, you probably should. It comes down to how you use it.

Here’s what Caltech had to say about it (and in the spirit of academic honesty, we borrowed this quote secondhand from the College Essay Guy):

Your essays are where we hear your voice. Relying on AI, specifically large language models such as ChatGPT or Bard, to craft your essay will dilute your unique expressions and perspective. While we know AI tools have become readily accessible over recent months, overuse of AI will diminish your individual, bold, creative identityas a prospective Techer.

Caltech considers it an ethical matter, but it’s also about maintaining your voice.

Things that hurt:

  • Copy and paste jobs straight from LLMs
  • Swapping your own voice, tone, and messiness for flawless prose
  • Translating an essay into another language

Things that help:

  • Running a finished draft through a tool like Grammarly to catch grammatical and spelling errors (obviously)
  • Creating AI-generated outlines (even professional writers struggle with form)
  • Generating questions or prompts to kickstart your process

Here’s a grand gut-check Caltech offers. If you’re unsure whether your use of AI crosses the line, ask whether it would be okay for an adult to do the same task. Would a teacher proofread your essay for typos or suggest adding a paragraph? Of course.

Would that same teacher write your first draft for you to edit and submit under your own name? No.

“Above all else,” the good folks at Caltech admissions remind applicants, “remember to be authentic to yourself when writing your essays.”

The advice is a little dated (what’s Bard, again?), but the principle holds.

Now the reframe: Do colleges check for AI in admissions essays? That’s the wrong question. Instead think about the outcome: Does using AI flatten my voice? Does it talk me out of writing something only I could write?

AI stops being a tool when it starts eroding your personality.

Your college essay should be authentically you

We also put the question to Ben Gutierrez, another Empowerly counselor: “Will your college essay get flagged as AI?”

Like Brennan, Ben actually sat at the desk. He served on admissions committees at both Vanderbilt and Johns Hopkins, reading through stacks of essays and trying (often in vain) to find the human in an essay pile.

Ben describes the same thing as Caltech admissions. Readers aren’t auditing your essays for AI. They’re looking for evidence of a mind at work. And AI-generated prose, however crisp and clean, reads like it was manufactured on an assembly line.

That’s also why “just make it sound less like AI and more human” is misguided advice. You can’t edit your way to a voice already erased. It has to be there, with all its warts and messiness, in the first draft.

The process is the essay. And even if you don’t consider yourself a “good writer,” you have a story that deserves to be told.

What your college essays should do (and why AI doesn’t help)

Once you understand what admissions readers are actually after, the temptation to outsource your essay to AI vanishes. Because AI is bad at the one thing that matters — reflecting on your unique experiences.

A great college essay isn’t the same as a great story. We’ve made the full case for this elsewhere, but here’s the long and short of it: all college essays are stories, yet not all stories make strong college essays.

A story is about what happened, while a college essay is about who you became because of it.

The strongest essays tend to start absurdly small. A conversation at the bus stop. A chipped coffee mug. A stubborn weed in a sidewalk crack.

The size of the event is irrelevant. What carries a college essay is the internal shift it triggered and the action the writer took because of it.

John Hopkins Essays That Worked show this idea in action. Each essay follows a formula: your memory of a specific (seemingly trivial) event that builds to something larger. How a soup recipe sparked an interest in international relations, for instance.

LLMs have none of that. They can generate a perfectly competent essay about resilience. They can’t “generate” the time your mother yelled at you for oversalting your food — and how this changed your way of looking at the world.

This is the real reason AI essays fail. It isn’t the em dashes, but the lack of self-reflection. You can’t prompt your way to a memory or an insight you haven’t actually had.

And once you’ve written your essay, the next question is whether it’s working. That’s much harder to judge from the inside. After living with your story for weeks, you lose the ability to see what a stranger reading it for the first time will think.

Where does the essay drag? Are you showing growth instead of saying it? Which sentences are doing the real work, and which ones are just clearing their throat?

That’s where a second set of eyes becomes critically important. Ideally, you want someone who’s read admissions essays for a living and knows the difference between a story and an essay with real stakes.

Why a human reader beats AI in college essay review

AI tools will tell you whether your sentences are clear and your structure is sound. Useful, as far as it goes.

What it can’t tell you is whether the essay sounds like you or whether the moment you chose actually reveals anything.

Those are human judgments, and they take a human who’s read thousands of admissions readers to make the right call.

That’s where Empowerly’s College Essay Review comes in. Our editors are former admissions officers and writing professionals (folks like Ben and Brennan) who know what readers at top schools actually respond to.

We work with students across multiple drafts to sharpen their reflection and tie it to real action. Tightening your essay’s structure is the easy part. Any AI tool is up to that task. We help with the harder stuff, like making sure your personality survives all the way to submission.

Let’s talk essays

FAQ

Do colleges check for AI in application essays?

Usually not in any formal way. Most admissions readers don’t run essays through AI detectors because the tools are unreliable. But experienced readers can tell when an essay was AI-generated because the writing is formulaic and impersonal.

Can you use AI to help with college essays?

Yes, for tasks like brainstorming prompts, proofreading a finished draft, or getting feedback on structure. The line is whether the tool is helping you write or writing for you. When in doubt, use the trusted-adult test: if it would be fine for a teacher to do the task, it’s fine for AI.

How much AI is acceptable in a college essay?

There’s no set percentage. A useful rule: if you deleted everything AI produced and your essay still existed, you used it as a tool.

Can a college essay get flagged as AI by mistake?

AI detectors do generate false positives, which is a big reason admissions offices don’t rely on them. The more realistic concern is an experienced reader sensing that AI wrote your essay.

Should I use AI to review my college essay?

AI can help with surface-level feedback on grammar and structure, but it can’t evaluate your voice or whether your essay reveals real growth. Human readers with admissions experience are far more valuable than “AI reviews.”

Bio: Dr. Austin Gorman has worked with students on SAT/ACT test prep and college essay writing. Additionally, he served as an admissions consultant at Clemson University Honors College and Brown University.

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