Comparison

Rytr vs Wordtune in 2026: Cheap short-form generator vs a focused rewrite assistant

Rytr generates new short-form copy from 40+ templates for $7.50 a month. Wordtune rewrites and refines text you already wrote, for $9.99 a month, and does not try to generate anything from a blank page.

Updated July 4, 2026
Rytr
Wordtune
Key takeaways
  • Rytr Unlimited is $7.50/month; Wordtune Unlimited is $9.99/month, both billed annually and both removing daily caps at their top consumer tier.
  • Wordtune fact-checks its AI rewrite suggestions against at least 5 sources; Rytr's templates generate new copy without a stated fact-checking layer.
  • Rytr covers 40+ use-case templates for generating new content (emails, ad copy, captions); Wordtune has no template library and focuses entirely on rewriting, tone switching, and summarizing existing text.
  • Wordtune supports translation and fluency improvements across 10 languages for non-native English speakers; Rytr's app is limited to 1 language on Free and Unlimited, expanding to 35+ only on the $24.16/month Premium tier.
  • Rytr includes a Copyscape-powered plagiarism checker on paid plans (50-100 checks/month); Wordtune has no plagiarism checker at any tier.
  • Rytr offers a pay-as-you-go developer API with 10,000 free credits; Wordtune does not publish API access on any of its plans.
  • Wordtune's free plan gives 10 rewrites per day and 3 summaries per month with unlimited grammar and spelling checks; Rytr's free plan gives 10,000 characters per month for new content generation.

Put Rytr and Wordtune side by side and the difference is really about direction. Rytr starts from nothing: pick a template, add a brief, and it writes new emails, ad copy, or captions for you to edit. Wordtune starts from something you already have: highlight a sentence, and it hands back context-aware rewrite alternatives, fact-checked against multiple sources, without ever generating a piece from scratch. Both land close to $8 to $10 a month at their top tier, so the question is not which is cheaper but whether you need a tool that creates or a tool that improves.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
Rytr$0/moFreelancers and small businesses who need to generate new short-form copy at high volume and lowest cost.
Wordtune$0/moNon-native English speakers and knowledge workers who need to refine, rephrase, and clarify writing they have already produced, rather than generate new copy.

Rytr

Affordable AI writing assistant for short-form content, emails, and social copy in 40+ formats

Full review →
Rytr screenshot

Forty-plus templates organized by use case are the core of Rytr: emails, meta titles, ad copy, social captions, review replies. Give it a brief and a tone and it returns three variants, which is fast for the kind of repetitive short-form writing that eats up a working day without needing much creative depth behind each individual piece.

Unlimited access is $7.50 a month, dropping the free plan's 10,000-character cap and adding one custom tone match plus 50 Copyscape plagiarism checks monthly. A pay-as-you-go API with 10,000 free credits opens the same generation to custom tools, supporting 30+ languages at the API level even though the consumer app stays at one language until the $24.16 Premium tier.

Rytr does not rewrite existing drafts as its core function; the templates are built to generate new copy from a brief, not to take a paragraph you wrote and hand back cleaner phrasing. If your problem is refining what already exists rather than producing something new, that gap matters.

Pricing
Feature
Free
$0/mo
Unlimited
$7.50/mo
Premium
$24.16/mo
AI content generation10K characters/moUnlimitedUnlimited
Tone of voice match1 custom tone5 custom tones
Plagiarism checks50/mo100/mo
Languages1135+
API access10,000 free creditsPay-as-you-goPay-as-you-go
Best for: Freelancers and small businesses who need to generate new short-form copy at high volume and lowest cost.

Wordtune

AI rewriting and paraphrasing tool that helps non-native English speakers and professionals write clearly and naturally

Full review →
Wordtune screenshot

The Wordtune interaction is simple by design: highlight a sentence or paragraph, and it surfaces multiple context-aware rewrite alternatives that account for what surrounds the selection. You choose the version that fits rather than accepting one AI output outright, and the suggestions themselves are checked against at least 5 sources before being shown.

Around that core, Wordtune adds one-click tone switching between casual and formal, AI text continuation for getting past writer's block, and Smart Translate across 10 languages built specifically to help non-native English speakers sound fluent rather than mechanically translated. Summarization for documents, webpages, and YouTube videos rounds out the feature set, capped at 3 per month on the free plan and unlimited on the $9.99 Unlimited tier.

What Wordtune skips is just as telling: no template library for generating new content from scratch, no plagiarism checker, and no published API. It is a refinement tool through and through, and it makes no attempt to compete with generation-first tools like Rytr on that front.

Pricing
Feature
Basic
$0/mo
Advanced
$6.99/mo (annual)
Unlimited
$9.99/mo (annual)
Rewrites and AI suggestions10/day30/dayUnlimited
AI summarizations3/month15/monthUnlimited
Fluency improvementsUnlimited
Vocabulary enhancementsUnlimited
Grammar and spelling checksUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Best for: Non-native English speakers and knowledge workers who need to refine, rephrase, and clarify writing they have already produced, rather than generate new copy.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Rytr
Wordtune
Primary focusTemplated short-form content generation: emails, ads, captions, product descriptionsRewriting and refining text you have already written
Starting paid price$7.50/month (Unlimited)$9.99/month (Unlimited, billed annually)
Content generation templates40+ use-case templates organized by taskNot a feature; no use-case template library
Rewrite / paraphrase engineNot the core use case; templates generate new copy rather than rewrite existing textYes, core feature: context-aware rewrite alternatives you choose from
Tone switching1 custom tone on Unlimited, 5 on PremiumYes, one-click casual/formal switching
Plagiarism checkerYes, Copyscape-powered, 50/month Unlimited, 100/month PremiumNot a feature
Fact-checking of AI suggestionsNot a listed featureYes, suggestions checked against at least 5 sources
Translation / multilingual support1 language on Free/Unlimited, 35+ on Premium ($24.16/mo)Smart Translate and fluency improvements across 10 languages
Developer APIYes, pay-as-you-go with 10,000 free creditsNot published
Chrome extensionYes, on all plans including freeYes, 4.7 rating, 10M users
Free plan limits10,000 characters/month, no credit card required10 rewrites/day, 3 summaries/month, unlimited grammar and spelling
AI summarizationNot a featureYes, documents, webpages, and YouTube videos; 3/month free, unlimited on Unlimited

Which should you choose?

Freelancers generating new short-form copy at high volume for the lowest priceRytr
Non-native English speakers who need fluent phrasing and translation supportWordtune
Anyone who wants a plagiarism checker bundled into the subscriptionRytr
Knowledge workers polishing emails and reports rather than generating new copyWordtune
Developers who want API access with free credits to prototype before payingRytr
Writers who want fact-checked rewrite suggestions rather than unverified AI outputWordtune

This comes down to which half of the writing process you actually need help with. Rytr is built for the moment before anything exists: a brief goes in, copy comes out. Wordtune is built for the moment after a draft exists but before it is good: a paragraph goes in, better phrasing comes out, checked against sources rather than just generated. Comparing their prices is almost beside the point since they rarely substitute for each other in practice.

Bottom line

Choose Rytr if you need to produce new short-form marketing copy quickly and cheaply, and value the built-in plagiarism checker and API access for future automation. Choose Wordtune if your writing already exists in rough form and needs clarity, tone adjustment, or fluency, especially if English is not your first language, since its fact-checked suggestions and translation support are not something Rytr offers at all. Writers who do both jobs regularly, drafting from scratch and then refining, will likely end up keeping both subscriptions, and at a combined cost under $18 a month, that is a reasonable outcome rather than a compromise.

Frequently asked questions

Is Rytr or Wordtune better for writing new marketing copy from scratch?

Rytr is built specifically for this: its 40+ templates cover emails, ad copy, and social captions, generating new drafts from a brief rather than editing existing text. Wordtune has no template library for generation; its entire workflow is built around rewriting text you have already written, so it is not the right tool for starting from a blank page.

Does Wordtune fact-check its rewrite suggestions?

Yes, this is one of Wordtune's stated differentiators: its AI suggestions are checked against at least 5 sources before being surfaced to the user. Rytr does not describe a comparable fact-checking process for the copy it generates from its templates.

Which tool is cheaper, Rytr or Wordtune?

Rytr's Unlimited plan at $7.50 per month is slightly cheaper than Wordtune's Unlimited plan at $9.99 per month, both billed annually. The two plans are not directly comparable in scope, though: Rytr's price buys unlimited content generation plus a plagiarism checker, while Wordtune's price buys unlimited rewriting, summarization, and fluency tools with no generation or plagiarism features.

Does Rytr have a plagiarism checker like some rewriting tools?

Yes. Rytr integrates Copyscape directly, giving Unlimited subscribers 50 plagiarism checks a month and Premium subscribers 100. Wordtune does not offer a plagiarism checker at any tier, since checking originality is outside its rewriting-focused scope.

Can Wordtune help with translation the way Rytr can?

Wordtune is the stronger option here. Its Smart Translate feature supports 10 languages with fluency improvements aimed at non-native English speakers, converting text into natural-sounding English rather than a literal translation. Rytr's consumer app is limited to 1 language on Free and Unlimited, only reaching 35+ languages on the $24.16/month Premium tier.

Is it worth paying for both Rytr and Wordtune?

For a writer who both drafts new short-form content and needs to polish existing writing, yes, the combined cost is under $18 a month and each tool covers a gap the other does not. A writer who only needs one function, generating new copy or refining existing text, should pick based on that single need rather than paying for both out of caution.

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