Definition
An AI disclosure statement is a short, plain-language notice that tells a reader, viewer, or listener that AI was used to create or assist with the content, and clarifies what role AI played and whether a human reviewed the output.
An AI disclosure statement is a short notice that tells your audience how AI was used in your content. This free generator produces FTC-aligned, platform-aware disclaimers for blog posts, social media, marketing copy, academic work, video, podcasts, newsletters, and internal memos in three lengths you can copy in one click.
Definition
An AI disclosure statement is a short, plain-language notice that tells a reader, viewer, or listener that AI was used to create or assist with the content, and clarifies what role AI played and whether a human reviewed the output.
Main product
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A long-form post on your site or a publication.
Compliance-friendly phrasing for regulated or corporate contexts.
Three lengths so you can match the surface. Pick the one that fits and copy it straight into your post, caption, byline, or footer.
One-liner, ideal for social captions or compact bylines.
Standard disclosure for blog posts, newsletters, and marketing copy.
Detailed and fully transparent. Best for editorial or academic work.
Pair your disclosure with the rest of your AI workflow - drafting, comparing tools, and tightening prompts.
Turn a niche or RSS feed into a ready-to-send newsletter draft.
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Open toolRefine the prompts behind your drafting and editing workflow.
Open toolCompare AI tools side by side with a structured chart.
Open toolCommon questions about FTC AI disclosure, where to put a disclaimer, and what counts as material AI involvement.
An AI disclosure statement is a short notice that tells the reader, viewer, or listener that AI was used to create or assist with the content. It typically names the role AI played (drafting, editing, generating images, translating) and confirms whether a human reviewed the output.
The FTC has not issued a single rule that says all AI content must be labeled, but its guidance on endorsements, advertising, and deceptive practices makes clear that material AI involvement should not be hidden when it could mislead consumers. Disclosing AI involvement clearly helps stay within FTC expectations.
Place the disclosure where readers will see it before forming an impression of the content. For blog posts and articles, that usually means at the top, in the byline, or directly after the title. For social posts and videos, include it in the caption or description. For ads, follow the platform's required ad and disclosure placement.
Light AI editing such as spell check or grammar suggestions usually does not require disclosure. Disclosure is recommended when AI materially shaped the text, generated images, translated the content, or produced output that a reasonable reader would expect a human to have written.
Most universities, journals, and conferences now require disclosure of AI assistance. Best practice is to name the AI tool used, describe what it was used for (brainstorming, outlining, drafting, editing, translation), and confirm that the author is responsible for the final submitted work.
This tool is informational and does not constitute legal advice. For high-risk or regulated content, please consult qualified counsel before publishing.