Draft your thesis statement in minutes
Answer a few prompts and get polished thesis statement drafts for argumentative, analytical, or expository writing — composed instantly, right in your browser.
Takes a debatable position and defends it with reasons — the standard form for persuasive essays and most thesis introductions.
Your drafts
Fill in the topic, your claim, and at least two reasons to see drafts.
What makes a strong thesis statement
- Arguable: someone could reasonably disagree — otherwise it's a summary, not a thesis.
- Specific: name the scope (who, where, when) instead of making sweeping claims.
- Supported: every reason you list must reappear as a section of your paper.
- One sentence: if you need two, sharpen the claim rather than widening it.
Frequently asked questions
What is a thesis statement?
The one or two sentences, usually at the end of your introduction, that state your central claim and preview the reasons your paper will defend.
Is using a thesis statement generator cheating?
No — this tool assembles your own topic, claim, and reasons into standard academic sentence patterns. The ideas remain yours, and you should revise the wording to fit your voice.
How long should a thesis statement be?
One clear sentence is the norm, two at most. Around 25–40 words fits most disciplines.
Where does the thesis statement go?
Almost always as the final sentence of the introduction, after you have framed the problem and before the roadmap of the paper.
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