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AI Content Disclosure Generator
Find out in 30 seconds whether you need to disclose your AI-generated content — and get ready-to-paste disclosure text for the EU AI Act, FTC rules, and every major platform.
Nothing you enter leaves your browser.
What kind of content is it?
How much did AI do?
Does it show real people, places, or events in a way that looks authentic?
Is it published to inform the public (news, health, finance, current events)?
Did a human review and take editorial responsibility?
Where will you publish it? (select all that apply)
Who is your audience? (select all that apply)
Is this sponsored or commercial content?
Your Disclosure Assessment
Rules that may apply to your content
Ready-to-paste disclosure text
Where & how to place your disclosure
Free plan shows guidance for 1 platform. Pro unlocks all selected platforms.
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Get the full disclosure toolkit
Everything you need to stay transparent across every platform.
- All platforms — disclosure text & placement guide for every channel at once
- Formal notice — site/policy-ready disclosure paragraph
- HTML & Markdown badge snippets
- AI Disclosure Policy template (PDF/DOCX)
- 1-page internal summary PDF
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Political & Election Content: Out of Scope
Political and election-related AI content is subject to stricter, rapidly-changing rules in many jurisdictions (EU, US states, and platform policies). This tool does not cover political content — please consult a legal professional.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to disclose AI-generated content?
It depends on the type of content, where you publish it, and who your audience is.
EU audiences are covered by the EU AI Act (Article 50, applying from August 2, 2026),
which requires disclosure for AI-generated deepfakes and certain public-interest text.
US creators must follow FTC endorsement rules for sponsored content and avoid deceptive AI content.
Platform policies (YouTube, TikTok, Meta) add their own requirements on top.
Use the tool above to get a tailored answer based on your specific situation.
What does the EU AI Act require for AI content from August 2026?
Article 50 of the EU AI Act applies from August 2, 2026. Key obligations:
(1) AI chatbot providers must tell users they're interacting with AI;
(2) providers of AI image/video/audio generation tools must embed machine-readable markings;
(3) deployers must disclose AI-generated or manipulated content that looks like real people, places or events (deepfakes);
(4) AI-generated text on public-interest topics (news, health, finance) must be disclosed unless a human took substantive editorial responsibility — not just a formality.
Note: AI systems already on the market before August 2, 2026 benefit from a transitional period until December 2, 2026. The European Commission published draft Art. 50 implementation guidelines (May 8, 2026) and a voluntary Code of Practice on Transparency of AI-Generated Content (June 10, 2026).
Read Article 50 on EUR-Lex →
Note: AI systems already on the market before August 2, 2026 benefit from a transitional period until December 2, 2026. The European Commission published draft Art. 50 implementation guidelines (May 8, 2026) and a voluntary Code of Practice on Transparency of AI-Generated Content (June 10, 2026).
Read Article 50 on EUR-Lex →
Does YouTube require an AI label?
Yes. YouTube requires creators to disclose when content uses realistic AI-generated or altered/synthetic
imagery, audio, or video — especially depicting real people or events. Check the "Altered or synthetic content"
option in YouTube Studio during upload. Failure to disclose may result in content removal or channel penalties.
YouTube synthetic content policy →
YouTube synthetic content policy →
Does TikTok or Instagram require an AI label?
TikTok: Requires an AIGC label for realistic AI visuals, audio, or video — toggle it in post settings before publishing.
Instagram/Facebook: Meta requires use of its self-disclosure tool for photorealistic AI-generated video and realistic AI audio. Still images rely more on automatic detection but disclosure is still recommended. Failing to disclose video or audio may result in penalties.
Instagram/Facebook: Meta requires use of its self-disclosure tool for photorealistic AI-generated video and realistic AI audio. Still images rely more on automatic detection but disclosure is still recommended. Failing to disclose video or audio may result in penalties.
What is the penalty for not disclosing AI content in the EU?
Under the EU AI Act, non-compliance with Article 50 transparency obligations can result in fines of up to
€15 million or 3% of total worldwide annual turnover, whichever is higher.
Enforcement is handled by national market surveillance authorities in each EU member state.
This tool provides general information only — always verify current rules with a qualified legal professional.
This tool provides general information only — always verify current rules with a qualified legal professional.
Is minor AI editing (grammar, color correction) subject to disclosure rules?
Generally no. Light AI assistance such as grammar correction, spell-checking, color grading, or
background cleanup is not typically the target of AI disclosure laws or platform policies.
The EU AI Act's Art. 50 focuses on content that could be mistaken for authentic depictions of
real people/events, or AI-generated text on public-interest topics without human editorial oversight.
You may still choose to disclose minor AI use — it builds audience trust — but it is generally not required.