ready-to-adapt sample declarations covering the most common student scenarios
number of universities requiring AI use declarations as standard alongside dissertation submission
of declarations should be honest — an inaccurate declaration is itself a form of misconduct
In this guide
The spread of AI use declaration requirements reflects how quickly universities have had to adapt their assessment frameworks. Where academic integrity policies once focused almost entirely on plagiarism, they now need to account for a much broader range of AI-assisted activities — some permitted, some prohibited, and many in between.
The declaration is your formal statement of where you stand. Done honestly, it demonstrates the integrity that the requirement is designed to promote. Done inaccurately — whether by omission or misrepresentation — it constitutes a separate form of academic misconduct at most institutions that require it.
For a full guide to what universities permit and prohibit in 2026, see: University AI Policies Explained: What You Can (and Can’t) Do. For guidance on how to use AI ethically throughout your dissertation, see: How to Use AI Ethically in Your Dissertation.
1. What a declaration needs to include
Most universities do not prescribe a specific format for AI use declarations. Where a form is provided, use it. Where no form is provided, a clear written statement included at the start or end of your dissertation (check your handbook for placement guidance) should cover the following:
- The specific tools you used, named individually (e.g. Grammarly, Elicit, ChatGPT) rather than described generically as “AI tools.”
- The purpose for which each tool was used — what stage of the process and what task it performed.
- A confirmation that your submitted writing is your own — that no AI tool generated text that appears in the dissertation.
- Any professional editing or proofreading you received, including human proofreading services, if your institution requires this to be declared.
2. Five sample declarations, ready to adapt
Copy the sample that most closely matches your situation and adapt the tool names and descriptions to reflect what you actually used. Replace all bracketed placeholder text.
3. Common declaration mistakes to avoid
►Being too vague
Declarations that say “I used AI tools for research assistance” without naming the tools or describing how they were used are unhelpful and may be flagged for clarification. Be specific: name each tool and describe each use.
►Under-declaring to avoid scrutiny
If your university requires a declaration, omitting tools you used — even tools whose use was permitted — is itself a form of misconduct. Declare everything you used, accurately. Permitted use declared honestly is not a problem. Undisclosed use, however minor, carries risk.
►Conflating AI research tools with AI writing tools
Using Elicit to find sources is categorically different from using ChatGPT to write paragraphs. Your declaration should reflect this distinction clearly. Describe what each tool actually did in your process, not just that you “used AI.”
►Forgetting to declare professional proofreading
Some institutions ask students to declare any third-party assistance, including professional proofreading. Check your handbook. If declaration is required, include it. Professional human proofreading is permitted everywhere — declaring it demonstrates transparency, not wrongdoing.
Dissertation Proofreading Services · Vappingo
Dissertation Proofreading Services: Fast, Affordable, Expert Editors
Whatever AI tools you used to support your research and writing, Vappingo’s professional human editors provide the final review that no automated tool can replicate. Grammar, argument clarity, citation formatting, academic tone — all checked by a qualified human expert before you submit. Fast turnaround, all subjects, all citation styles, fully compliant with university academic integrity standards worldwide.
4. Strengthening your submission with a Certificate of Human Editing
In an environment where AI detection tools are increasingly deployed by universities, submitting proof that your dissertation was reviewed by a qualified human editor is a meaningful additional assurance — for you, and for your institution.
Vappingo · Professional Dissertation Proofreading
Certificate of Human Editing
When Vappingo proofreads your dissertation, we issue a Certificate of Human Editing confirming that your work was reviewed by a qualified human editor — not an AI tool. The certificate records the editor’s credentials, the date of review, and the scope of the proofreading service provided.
You can include this certificate with your dissertation submission as evidence that any proofreading was conducted by a human professional. In institutions where AI detection concerns have raised questions about the origin of polished writing, this certificate provides clear, credible documentation that the improvement to your text came from human expertise, not AI assistance.
The certificate is provided automatically with every Vappingo dissertation proofreading order.
Frequently asked questions
►Does every university require an AI use declaration?
Not yet, but the number requiring one is growing rapidly. Check your course handbook and your university’s academic integrity guidance. If no declaration is required, you may still choose to include one voluntarily — it demonstrates transparency and is never penalized.
►Do I need to declare Grammarly use?
It depends on your institution. Many universities treat grammar checkers as writing support tools equivalent to spell-checkers and do not require their declaration. Others require declaration of any AI-assisted tool. Check your handbook. When in doubt, declare it — listing Grammarly in a declaration causes no harm and demonstrates care.
►What if I used an AI tool before I knew it needed to be declared?
Declare it honestly. An accurate declaration of permitted AI use — even if you did not initially realize a declaration was required — is treated very differently from a discovered undisclosed use. Contact your supervisor or student support office if you are uncertain how to handle this.
►Should I declare professional proofreading in my AI declaration?
Professional human proofreading is not AI use and should not appear in an AI use declaration unless your institution specifically asks you to declare all third-party assistance. Check your handbook. If third-party assistance requires declaration, mention your Vappingo proofread and attach the Certificate of Human Editing. If only AI use requires declaration, professional proofreading does not belong in the AI statement.
►Can I submit a Vappingo Certificate of Human Editing with my dissertation?
Yes. The certificate is provided with every Vappingo dissertation proofreading order. It confirms that your dissertation was reviewed by a qualified human editor, which may be appended to your submission as evidence of human-conducted proofreading. Check your institution’s guidance on supporting documents for any specific submission requirements.
Continue reading · AI in Education Series
Ethical Use
How to Use AI Ethically in Your Dissertation (Without Getting Expelled)
Policy Guide
University AI Policies Explained: What You Can (and Can’t) Do
ChatGPT Policies
Can I Use ChatGPT for My Dissertation? (What Your University Actually Says)
Pre-Submission
Is Your Dissertation Really Ready to Submit? A Pre-Submission Checklist