AI Essay Scoring
Get clear, actionable feedback on clarity, structure, and admissions impact, instantly.
Most first drafts score below 70. Find out where yours stands.
Essay Score
Line Suggestion
Replace “passionate about” → “driven by”
Admissions View
Blend risk: Low ✓
Features
Every feature is built around one goal: helping your authentic story stand out to the right readers.
Match the reading style of your assigned team. Adjust tone, cadence, and emphasis region by region.
Mine linguistic and structural patterns from real admitted applications across the Ivy League and beyond.
Battle-tested playbooks for narrative arcs, topic selection, and prestige signals that resonate.
Targeted rewrites with clear rationale. Keep your authentic voice while raising clarity and impact.
Turn vague claims into concrete proof. Quantify outcomes and document achievements the right way.
Flag tone risks and topic hazards before you submit. Know what hurts before it's too late.
How It Works
Drop in your draft, note the target schools, and optionally paste the prompt for context.
Receive a score across content, structure, and style, plus an overall quality rating.
Use the line-by-line suggestions to sharpen your voice and raise your score before you submit.
20,000+
students improved drafts
92 avg
post-edit quality score
7 min
median time to first edit
Pricing
Start for free. Upgrade when you're ready to go deeper.
Starter
Perfect for getting started.
Pro
Everything you need to get in.
30-day money-back guarantee. Cancel anytime.
Student Success
Students who used Ivy Admit improved their essay scores by an average of 18 points.
“The regional tone advice made my voice feel natural and focused. My essay finally had a real arc, and it actually got me in.”
Sarah K.
Admitted to Harvard
“Line-by-line feedback was surgical. I kept my stories but doubled the impact. Went from 74 to 91 after two revision cycles.”
Marcus J.
Admitted to Yale
“Risk guardrails saved me from submitting a topic that would have hurt my chances. Ivy Admit flagged it before I even considered changing it.”
Ava L.
Admitted to Princeton
FAQ