🔍

Passive Voice Checker

Detect passive voice constructions in your writing and get suggestions to make your prose more direct and powerful.

Active vs. Passive Examples
Passive
The report was written by the team.

Mistakes were made.

The package was delivered yesterday.
Active
The team wrote the report.

We made mistakes.

The courier delivered the package yesterday.

About Passive Voice Checker

Passive Voice Checker is a free online text utility that lets you detect passive voice constructions in your writing and get suggestions to make your prose more direct and powerful instantly in your browser. Writers, editors, students, and content creators use this tool daily to save time on repetitive text manipulation tasks. No data is sent to any server — everything is processed locally on your device.

How to Use

1
Paste your text Enter or paste the text you want to process into the input field. There's no length limit for most operations.
2
Choose your options Select any relevant options or modes to control how your text will be transformed.
3
Process the text Click the action button to transform your text. Results appear instantly in the output area.
4
Copy the result Click the Copy button to copy the transformed text to your clipboard, ready to paste anywhere.
🔒 Privacy note: All processing happens locally in your browser. Your data is never sent to any server.

Why Use Passive Voice Checker?

✍️
Save Hours of Manual Editing Passive Voice Checker automates tedious text tasks that would take minutes or hours to do by hand. Process thousands of lines in a single click.
🔒
Complete Privacy Your text is processed entirely in your browser. Nothing is sent to any server, stored, or logged. Close the tab and your data is gone.
📋
Copy-Paste Friendly Designed for the real workflow: paste your text, transform it, copy the result. No account required, no file uploads, no unnecessary steps.
🌐
Works with Any Language Full Unicode support means Passive Voice Checker handles English, Chinese, Arabic, emoji, and any other language or script correctly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Passive voice occurs when the grammatical subject of a sentence is the recipient of the action rather than the one performing it. It typically uses a "to be" verb (is, are, was, were, been, being) followed by a past participle. Example: "The email was sent by Maria" (passive) vs. "Maria sent the email" (active). Active voice is generally clearer, more direct, and easier to read.

Passive voice is appropriate in several cases: (1) when the actor is unknown — "The artifact was discovered in 1923"; (2) in scientific writing where the method matters more than who did it — "The samples were heated to 200°C"; (3) when you deliberately want to de-emphasize the actor — "Mistakes were made" in political or diplomatic contexts; (4) to vary sentence rhythm and avoid repetition. Most style guides recommend keeping passive voice below 15-20% of sentences.

The formula is straightforward: identify the actor (usually after "by"), move it to the front, and restructure the verb. Steps: (1) Find the "to be" verb + past participle (e.g., "was written"). (2) Identify who performed the action. (3) Make that person/thing the subject. Example: "The law was passed by Congress" → "Congress passed the law." If no actor is mentioned, you may need to add one or restructure the idea entirely.