Free.

Free AI Art Detector.

If you are buying, commissioning, or judging artwork, this tool tells you whether a piece came from a human or from a generator like Midjourney, DALL·E, Stable Diffusion, or Flux. Free, no signup.

1Drop imageor click to upload
2Hit checkwe analyze in seconds
3Read resultAI likelihood + source
Analysis result
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AI likelihood
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Drop or upload an image on the left to analyze it.

Why AI art is hard to spot at a glance.

2026 diffusion models produce work that is visually indistinguishable from human pieces to most viewers. The AI tells that worked in 2023, like extra fingers, melting hands, malformed eyes, were specific to that generation of models and have largely been fixed. What has not changed is the statistical structure of how diffusion models lay down pixels, and the metadata flags that many platforms still attach.

For artists, illustrators, and clients.

If you are a commissioner, you can verify what you are paying for before the deposit clears. If you are an artist, you can prove your work is yours when a platform automatically flags it. If you are a judge or curator, you can audit submissions without accusing anyone.

Frequently asked.

Can it tell a digital painting from AI-generated art?
In most cases yes. Human digital paintings have brush-stroke patterns and intentional layering that AI generators do not reproduce identically. The detector flags both with appropriate confidence levels.
What about AI-assisted art (artist used AI for parts of the piece)?
Mixed-source art is the hardest case. The detector flags the AI portions but cannot point to specific regions. For commission verification, mixed-source results should prompt a direct conversation with the artist.
Will it detect art generated by Midjourney or Stable Diffusion specifically?
Yes. Both are well-covered. The detector also handles DALL·E, Flux, Imagen, Firefly, and most major art-focused models.
Does it work on traditional media photographed for a portfolio?
Yes. A photograph of a painting is a real photo, so the detector treats it accordingly. There is no false flag for digitized real-world art.