The raw comparison is lopsided: an AI can generate a 1,000-word draft for a few cents in tokens, while a freelance writer charges anywhere from $50 to $500 for the same length. But that’s not the real number. The honest cost of AI content is the token cost plus the human hours spent editing, fact-checking and rewriting the draft into something publishable. Once you add that, a “free” AI article often lands at a real cost per word that’s much closer to a human’s than the headline suggests. The AI vs human writing calculator works both sides so you compare the true totals, not the marketing ones.
The generation cost is a rounding error
Start with what the model actually charges. A 1,000-word article is roughly 1,300 tokens of output, plus your prompt and any context. On a mid-tier model priced around $3 per million input tokens and $15 per million output, generating that draft costs well under a cent. Even a long, heavily-prompted piece rarely breaks a few cents.
So if you stop there, AI wins by three or four orders of magnitude. The problem is that a raw draft is not finished content. It needs a human to check the facts, fix the generic phrasing, add specifics the model couldn’t know, and cut the padding. That labour is the real cost, and it’s where the comparison actually happens.
The editing overhead is the whole story
Editing an AI draft is faster than writing from scratch, but it isn’t free. A light polish on a solid draft might take 20 minutes per 1,000 words. A piece that needs fact-checking, restructuring and voice work can eat an hour or more — sometimes longer than writing it yourself would have. These figures vary a lot by writer and topic, so treat them as ranges to plug into your own numbers, not fixed rules.
Multiply that time by a real hourly rate — your own, or an editor’s — and you have the honest cost. This is the number most “AI writing is basically free” claims quietly skip.
A worked example
Say you need a 1,000-word blog post.
- Token cost: roughly 1,300 output tokens plus a 500-token prompt. Call it $0.02.
- Editing: a careful editor spends 40 minutes cleaning it up at $40/hour — that’s $26.67.
- True total: ~$26.69, or about 2.7 cents per word.
Now the human writer: a competent freelancer charges $150 for the same post, delivered clean — 15 cents per word — but needs only a 10-minute review at your end ($6.67), for a real total of $156.67.
On paper the AI route is roughly six times cheaper. That holds when the editing stays light. Push the editing to a full hour of heavy rework and the AI post’s true cost climbs past $40, and if the draft is wrong enough to need a second pass, you’re paying twice. The verdict flips based entirely on how much human time the draft demands.
True cost per word, side by side
| Route | Generation | Human time | True total | Per word |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI, light edit | $0.02 | 20 min @ $40 | ~$13.35 | ~1.3¢ |
| AI, heavy edit | $0.02 | 60 min @ $40 | ~$40.02 | ~4.0¢ |
| Human writer | $150 | 10 min review @ $40 | ~$156.67 | ~15.7¢ |
The table makes the real lever obvious: it isn’t the token price, it’s the editing hours. Cut those and AI wins comfortably; let them balloon and the advantage evaporates.
Hours saved is the other half
Cost per word is one axis; time is the other. If AI drafting turns a 3-hour writing job into a 40-minute editing job, that saved time has value even when the dollar cost is similar — you ship more, or you free the writer for work only a human can do. The AI vs human writing calculator shows both the money and the hours saved so you can weigh throughput, not just unit cost.
When a human writer is still the right call
AI drafting shines for volume, first drafts and low-stakes content. It’s the wrong tool when being wrong is expensive:
- High-stakes accuracy — legal, medical, financial or safety content, where an unchecked hallucination is a liability, not a typo.
- Original insight — reporting, interviews, and thought leadership built on experience the model doesn’t have.
- Brand voice that carries weight — the flagship pieces readers judge you by.
In those cases the editing overhead on an AI draft is so high that a writer who nails it first time is genuinely cheaper. And if you’re publishing AI-assisted content at scale, it’s worth knowing how recognisable it is — how to spot AI-written text covers the tells that editing needs to erase. For teams weighing this cost across a whole product, the AI cost per user calculator frames the same trade-off at the unit-economics level.