RefineText Pro

Grammarly alternative

This page is for one intent: you want grammar + tone improvements. Compare tools by the percent of suggestions you can accept without rewriting your intent.

Quick test

  1. Paste a messy email and a longer paragraph
  2. Run grammar + tone improvements
  3. Check if the result is clearer without changing meaning

What “good grammar checking” means in practice

The best result is not “zero errors”—it’s text that reads clearly, keeps intent, and doesn’t introduce weird phrasing.

A good tool fixes grammar and punctuation, but also improves clarity and tone where appropriate.

What to evaluate (beyond grammar)

Clarity: does it remove ambiguity?

Tone: does it become more professional without sounding robotic?

Consistency: do suggestions stay aligned across paragraphs?

False positives: does it “correct” things that are already fine?

Meaning drift: does it change your claim or add new details?

Decision checklist

Choose the tool that:

- Improves readability without changing meaning

- Suggests edits you actually accept

- Works for your target language and writing style

- Fits your workflow (fast iteration, copy/paste)

FAQ

Do grammar tools replace proofreading?
They reduce mistakes, but you still want a human pass for facts, tone, and context.
What’s the best way to compare?
Use two samples: a messy email and a longer document. Compare how often you accept suggestions and whether tone remains consistent.

Related pages

RefineText vs GrammarlyProofread an essay (guide)
Try the grammar checker