Free SOP Checker for MS in US Applications

SOP Checker for MS in US Applications

Your statement of purpose is where most Indian MS applications quietly lose the admissions committee. The academics are usually fine. The SOP reads like a biography, opens with a childhood story, and never actually answers the two questions a US committee is scanning for: why this field, and why this program.

What US admissions committees actually look for in an SOP

A reviewer spends two or three minutes on your SOP. In that time they are checking:

  • A specific research or career direction, not a broad interest. "I am passionate about computer science" says nothing. "I want to work on distributed systems after a project where I cut our query latency by 40 percent" says everything.
  • Fit with this exact program. Naming two or three professors whose work connects to yours, and why, beats any amount of praise for the university's ranking.
  • Evidence over adjectives. Show the project, the result, the paper, the responsibility. Committees discount "hardworking, dedicated, passionate" instantly.
  • A tight structure. Where you are, what pulled you toward this field, what you have done about it, why this program, what you will do after. Not a chronological life story.

Common mistakes that sink Indian SOPs

Opening with a childhood anecdote or a quote, restating your resume in paragraph form, over-explaining your GPA, using formal or flowery English, and writing the same SOP for every university with only the program name swapped. The scorer below reads your draft the way a committee would and shows you where it is losing them, so you can fix the substance before you submit.

100% Free · No signup

Is Your SOP Strong Enough to Get In?

Paste your Statement of Purpose and get scored the way a real admissions committee reads it — program fit, narrative flow, and authenticity — plus how likely it is to trip an AI detector. See exactly where it's weak before you hit submit, then fix it.

Your Statement of Purpose

We grade against the exact program you're targeting — the more accurate the target, the sharper the fit score.

0 words

~15 seconds · No card · No signup

Reads it like an admissions committee AI-detection risk check Your text is never stored

Reading your SOP…

An admissions grader is scoring fit, flow, and authenticity, then checking AI-detection risk.

Your Admissions Score
0/100
Program Fit
0/100
How specifically you reference this school, faculty & labs.
Narrative Flow
0/100
Whether your story arcs logically from hook to close.
Authenticity
0/100
How human (vs. formulaic / templated) it reads.

AI-detection risk

Reads humanReads AI-generated

⚠️ Top Red Flags to Fix First

🎓

Now make it strong enough to stand out

You've seen the score. Sign up free to unlock the full diagnosis and the coach that fixes it — preserving your voice, not ghostwriting over it.

  • Every red flag we found, with the exact line that triggered it
  • Section-by-section rewrite that sharpens your "why this program"
  • Anti-detection humanizer to strip the AI tells before you submit
  • Region-tuned formatting for US, UK, Canada, Australia & India MBA
🔒 Locked: more red flags and the full committee feedback are hidden.

FAQ

How long should an SOP for a US MS program be?

Usually one to two pages, or around 800 to 1000 words unless the program states a limit. Check each program's exact requirement, since some cap it at 500 words and others ask for a specific prompt.

Should I start my SOP with a childhood story or a quote?

No. US committees see thousands of childhood-anecdote openings and skim past them. Open with your specific academic or research direction and what led you to it. Lead with substance, not a hook.

Do I need a different SOP for each university?

Yes, at least the fit section. The body about your background can stay similar, but the part explaining why this program, which professors, and which labs must be specific to each university. A generic SOP is easy to spot and hurts you.

Does this scorer write my SOP for me?

No. It scores and gives feedback on the draft you paste in, so you can see what a committee would flag. You write your own SOP, which is what admissions offices expect and what AI-detection tools are increasingly checking for.

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