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AI Text Summarizer

Paste up to 50,000 characters and get back a focused summary in the style and length you choose. Bullet points, a clean paragraph, a TL;DR, or a detailed analysis — the AI reads the whole text so you don't have to.

Live Demo
INPUT
World leaders gathered at the annual Global Climate Summit in Geneva to announce a landmark agreement aimed at reducing carbon emissions by 50% before 2035. The accord, signed by 194 nations, introduces binding targets for industrial output, transportation, and energy production. Developing countries will receive $100 billion annually in climate adaptation funding, while developed nations commit to phasing out coal-fired power plants within the next decade. Environmental groups have praised the agreement as a historic step forward, though some critics argue that enforcement mechanisms remain too weak to ensure compliance across all participating nations.
OUTPUT
• 194 nations signed a binding agreement at the Geneva Climate Summit to cut carbon emissions by 50% before 2035

• Binding targets cover industrial output, transportation, and energy production sectors

• Developing nations will receive $100B annually in climate adaptation funding

• Developed countries must phase out coal power plants within 10 years

• Environmental groups hail it as historic, but critics question enforcement strength

Why Choose Our AI Text Summarizer

Key Points Extraction

AI identifies the most important ideas and condenses them into clear, concise summaries

Instant Results

Summarize lengthy articles, papers, and documents in seconds — save hours of reading

Any Content Type

Works with articles, research papers, reports, emails, books, and any text format

Context Aware

Preserves meaning, nuance, and critical details while dramatically reducing text length

Perfect For

Research Papers Reports Long Emails Meeting Notes News Articles Book Chapters

How It Works

Intelligent Text Analysis

The summarizer parses the full structure of your pasted text, locating the main argument, supporting evidence, and conclusions. It weighs each sentence against the rest of the document to decide what belongs in the summary and what can be dropped without losing meaning.

When you pick Bullet Points, the output breaks the text into discrete, scannable claims. When you choose Paragraph or Detailed Analysis, the AI writes connected prose that reads as a coherent standalone piece. The Academic style preserves formal register and cites the source text's own terminology.

Frequently Asked Questions

Paste your text into the input box, choose a summary style (Bullet Points, Paragraph, TL;DR, Detailed Analysis, or Academic) and a target length (Short, Medium, or Long), then click Summarize. The AI reads the full text, identifies the most important ideas, and returns a condensed version in the format you selected.

The tool supports over 30 languages including Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Arabic, Chinese, and more. Paste text in any supported language, select that language from the dropdown, and the summary will be returned in the same language. For mixed-language documents, selecting the dominant language gives the best results.

Yes. The Summary Style dropdown lets you pick Bullet Points, Paragraph, TL;DR, Detailed Analysis, or Academic. The Summary Length dropdown gives you Short (around 100 words), Medium (around 250 words), or Long (around 500 words). Those two choices together control both the format and how much detail the summary retains.

A summary is a condensed restatement of the source text, so it will naturally reflect that source's ideas. The AI writes the summary in its own words rather than copying sentences verbatim, but the summary is not independent original writing. If you're submitting academic work, check your institution's policy on AI-assisted summarization before using the output directly.

Yes. Copy the summary to any text editor and revise it as needed. You might want to add context the AI couldn't infer, adjust terminology for a specific audience, or cut the output down further. The summary gives you a solid starting draft, and the final version is yours to shape.

Most summaries are ready in a few seconds. Longer inputs close to the 50,000-character limit may take slightly longer, but the wait is still a fraction of the time you'd spend reading the full text yourself.

Yes. Summaries you generate belong to you and can be used in reports, briefings, study notes, newsletters, or any other context. Keep in mind that the underlying source text may have its own copyright, so reproduce only the summary, not large excerpts of the original.

General-purpose chatbots can summarize text, but you have to write the prompt yourself, specify the format, and often iterate several times. This tool has the summarization task built in: the style and length controls translate directly into a well-constructed prompt behind the scenes, so you get a consistent, formatted result without prompt engineering.

Your pasted text is sent to the AI to generate the summary and is not stored on our servers after processing. We do not use your input text to train models or share it with third parties. Copy or save the summary yourself, as it is not retained once you leave the page.

Paste clean, complete text rather than fragmented notes or heavily formatted tables, since the AI reads prose better than raw data. Choose the summary style that matches your goal: Bullet Points for quick scanning, Paragraph for readability, Detailed Analysis when you need the AI to surface sub-arguments, Academic when the terminology of the source matters. If the first result misses something important, try a longer length setting and compare.

Free Text Summarizer: AI Condenses Any Text into Key Points vs Other Methods

Feature Luxoret AI Manual / Traditional Other Tools
Speed Ready in seconds Hours of writing Minutes per piece
Skill Required None — describe what you need Strong writing skills Prompt engineering
Variations Unlimited instant rewrites Time-consuming revision Limited by credits
Languages Multi-language support Writer's native language Limited language options
Consistency Consistent tone and style Varies by writer Template-dependent