If you've searched for AI tools recently, you've probably noticed the same thing I did there are way too many of them. Every day, a new AI website claims it can write better, create better images, edit videos faster, or completely change the way you work. After a while, it becomes hard to tell which ones are actually useful and which ones are just following the trend.

So, I decided to spend time exploring more than 100 AI websites as I could. Some became part of my daily workflow, some impressed me with unique features, and many were simply not worth using. Here below I listed 100 AI Websites which I explored
Comple List of Tested AI Tools
- ChatGPT – All-purpose AI chatbot for writing, planning, and coding help.
- Claude – AI assistant known for careful instruction-following and long-document handling.
- Gemini – Google's AI assistant, integrated with Gmail, Docs, and Drive.
- Grok – AI chatbot built into X (Twitter), strong on real-time info.
- Meta AI – AI assistant built into WhatsApp and Instagram.
- DeepSeek – Free, capable AI model strong at coding and math.
- Le Chat (Mistral) – European AI chatbot focused on privacy and data residency.
- Pi (Inflection) – Conversational AI companion, less task-focused.
- Perplexity – AI search engine that answers with cited sources.
- NotebookLM – AI research tool that answers only from your uploaded notes/PDFs.
- You.com – Search engine combining web results with multiple AI modes.
- Elicit – AI tool for summarizing and analyzing academic research papers.
- Consensus – AI search tool that surfaces what scientific studies actually say.
- Phind – AI search engine built specifically for developers.
- Cursor – AI code editor that understands your entire codebase.
- GitHub Copilot – AI pair-programmer with inline code suggestions.
- Windsurf (Codeium) – AI coding assistant similar to Cursor.
- Replit – Build and deploy apps with AI, no local setup needed.
- v0 (Vercel) – Generates React UI components from text prompts.
- Lovable – Builds full working apps (with database) from a prompt.
- Bolt.new – Builds and previews apps live in the browser from a prompt.
- Tabnine – Privacy-focused AI code autocomplete tool.
- Sourcegraph Cody – AI assistant for navigating large, complex codebases.
- Wix AI – AI website builder with auto-generated copy and design.
- Hostinger AI Builder – Budget-friendly AI website builder, popular in India.
- Framer AI – AI website builder focused on polished, design-forward output.
- 10Web – AI website builder/rebuilder for WordPress sites.
- Durable – Generates a full small-business website in under a minute.
- Squarespace AI – AI content and image tools inside Squarespace templates.
- Jasper – AI writing tool for brand-consistent marketing content.
- Copy.ai – AI tool for fast ad copy and product descriptions.
- Grammarly – AI writing assistant for grammar, tone, and clarity.
- Notion AI – AI writing and summarizing built into Notion workspaces.
- Sudowrite – AI writing assistant built for fiction writers.
- QuillBot – AI paraphrasing and grammar-checking tool.
- Writesonic – AI tool for marketing and blog content generation.
- Hemingway Editor – Readability tool that simplifies and clarifies writing.
- Midjourney – AI image generator known for artistic, polished visuals.
- DALL-E – AI image generator accessible through ChatGPT.
- Adobe Firefly – AI image generation integrated into Photoshop/Illustrator.
- Canva Magic Studio – AI design tools for graphics, presentations, and social posts.
- Leonardo AI – AI image generator popular for game art and concept design.
- Ideogram – AI image generator strong at rendering readable text in images.
- Synthesia – Turns scripts into videos with AI presenters.
- Runway – AI video generation and editing tool, including text-to-video.
- Pika – AI tool for generating short video clips from prompts.
- HeyGen – AI avatar and video generation tool, similar to Synthesia.
- ElevenLabs – Realistic AI text-to-speech and voice cloning.
- Murf AI – AI voiceover tool for videos and ads.
- Suno – AI tool that generates full songs with vocals from text prompts.
- Udio – AI music generation tool similar to Suno.
- Gamma – Turns outlines into designed presentations or documents.
- Fathom – Records and summarizes video meetings automatically.
- Otter.ai – AI meeting transcription and summary tool.
- Reclaim.ai – AI calendar tool that protects focus time automatically.
- Motion – AI-driven task and calendar scheduling tool.
- Mem – AI note-taking app that auto-organizes related notes.
- Zapier AI – Connects apps and builds AI-powered automations.
- Make (Integromat) – Visual automation platform with AI features.
- n8n – Open-source workflow automation tool with AI capabilities.
- Lindy – Builds AI "agents" for repetitive workflows like scheduling and inbox triage.
- Photomath – Solves and explains math problems from a photo.
- Quizlet AI – Generates flashcards and practice questions from notes.
- Socratic (Google) – Breaks down homework questions step by step.
- Intercom Fin – AI customer support chatbot with human handoff.
- Drift – AI-powered conversational marketing and lead qualification.
- Zendesk AI – Summarizes support tickets and suggests agent responses.
- HubSpot AI – AI tools for drafting emails and summarizing CRM data.
- Surfer SEO – Analyzes top-ranking pages to optimize content for SEO.
- Semrush AI – AI features layered on keyword and competitor research tools.
- Ahrefs AI – AI summaries and content gap analysis for SEO.
- Frase – AI tool for outlining and structuring SEO-friendly articles.
- Cleo – AI chat-based budgeting and spending tracker.
- Rocket Money – AI tool that finds and cancels forgotten subscriptions.
- Wealthfront – Robo-advisor using AI-driven portfolio management.
- Ada Health – AI symptom checker for preliminary health guidance.
- Woebot – AI chatbot offering CBT-style mental health support.
- Whoop – Wearable with AI coaching based on recovery and sleep data.
- Oura – Wearable ring with AI-driven sleep and health insights.
- Character.AI – Platform for chatting with AI roleplay characters.
- Poe – Single app giving access to multiple AI chatbot models.
- HuggingFace – Platform for finding and hosting open-source AI models.
- Replika – AI companion chatbot app.
- Descript – AI video and podcast editing through text transcripts.
- Krisp – Removes background noise on calls in real time using AI.
- Tome – AI presentation builder similar to Gamma.
- Beautiful.ai – AI-assisted presentation design tool.
- Galileo AI – Generates UI designs from text prompts.
- Uizard – Converts sketches into app/website mockups using AI.
- Looka – AI logo and brand kit generator.
- Remove.bg – AI tool for instantly removing image backgrounds.
- Cleanup.pictures – AI tool for removing unwanted objects from photos.
- Topaz Labs – AI photo and video upscaling software.
- Krea – Real-time AI image generation and editing tool.
- Magnific – AI image upscaler that adds extra detail.
- Speechify – AI text-to-speech app for reading articles aloud.
- Glean – AI-powered enterprise search across company tools.
- Clay – AI-powered sales prospecting and outreach tool.
- Gong – AI tool that analyzes sales calls for coaching insights.
- Fireflies.ai – AI meeting transcription and summary tool for sales teams.
To make things simple, I've grouped the websites by category, so you can quickly find the tools that match what you're looking for instead of scrolling through a random list.
Let's get started.
The everyday chat tools
ChatGPT is still where most people start, and honestly there's a reason for that. It's the Swiss army knife writing, planning, explaining concepts, even rough coding help. Not the best at any one thing anymore, but good enough at almost everything that it stays useful.
Claude is the one I personally reach for when I'm writing something longer or need to feed it a big PDF and actually trust the summary. It tends to follow instructions more carefully and doesn't ramble as much. If you've ever asked an AI to "keep this under 300 words" and watched it write 600 anyway, you'll appreciate Claude.
Gemini makes the most sense if your life already runs on Gmail and Google Docs, because it's sitting right there inside them. I use it mostly when I need something pulled straight out of my inbox or Drive without copy-pasting.
Grok is a strange one to recommend but I'll say it anyway if you're on X and want a quick read on something trending right now, it's genuinely fast at that. Not my go-to for serious work though.
When you need real answers, not just chat
This is a category people sleep on. Perplexity doesn't just give you an answer, it shows where the answer came from, with actual links. For anything where you need to double-check a fact before putting it in an article (which, as a blogger, is basically every day), this has saved me from a few embarrassing mistakes.
NotebookLM works differently you feed it your own notes or PDFs and it only answers from that material. I started using this for organizing research on a student-income-apps piece I was writing, and it was honestly better than going through my own notes manually.
For the coders and the "I wish I could code" crowd
If you write code for a living, you've probably already got an opinion on Cursor and GitHub Copilot. Cursor reads your whole codebase, not just the open file, so it answers questions like "where else is this function used" without you hunting through folders. Copilot is more of an autocomplete on steroids and plays nicer if your team already lives on GitHub.
Then there's V0 from the Vercel team, which spits out actual React components from a plain English description. And Lovable, which goes further and builds entire working apps database and all from a prompt. I've seen non-developers put together working prototypes with this that would've taken a freelancer a week before.
Building a website without hiring anyone
Wix's AI builder asks you a few questions and hands you a near-complete site with copy, images, even a logo. It's not going to win design awards but for a small shop or local business owner who just needs to exist online, it gets the job done fast.
Hostinger deserves a mention here specifically for Indian users — the pricing is friendlier on the wallet, and the AI builder walks you through setup without assuming you know what a "domain" even is.
If design actually matters to you — say you're a freelancer building a portfolio Framer's AI output looks noticeably more polished than most builders out of the box.
And if you're already on WordPress and don't want to start over, 10Web rebuilds your existing site with AI rather than forcing you onto a new platform.
Writing and content tools
Jasper and Copy.ai both do similar jobs — fast marketing copy, ad lines, product descriptions — and honestly which one you prefer comes down to taste more than features.
Grammarly has quietly gotten smarter. It's gone past red squiggly lines into actually telling you when something sounds too stiff or too casual for the context. Useful if English isn't your first language and you want your writing to read naturally (which, fun fact, is something I had to think about a lot while writing this very post).
Notion AI lives right inside your Notion workspace, so if that's where you keep your notes and to-do lists already, it saves you the trouble of switching tabs to summarize or draft something.
Images, video, and voice
Midjourney is still the one people screenshot and share because the images genuinely look like art rather than "AI slop." Takes a bit of prompt-fiddling to get good results though.
Synthesia turns a script into a video with an AI presenter talking it through — no camera, no mic, no editing software. I've seen small YouTube channels use this for explainer content and you really can't tell at first glance.
ElevenLabs does voice — text to speech that sounds like an actual human, and it can clone a voice convincingly enough that it's a little unsettling. Great for podcast intros or multilingual voiceovers without paying a studio.
Runway is the one to check out for actual video generation and editing, text-to-video included.
Presentations and getting through meetings
Gamma takes a rough outline and turns it into an actual designed presentation in a couple of minutes. I've used this for client decks when I genuinely did not have the patience to fight with PowerPoint alignment at midnight.
Fathom sits in on your video calls, records, and gives you a summary with action items afterward, so you're not the person frantically typing notes while trying to also pay attention.
And for stitching everything together
Zapier's AI agents connect the apps you already use and let you set up automations on top — like auto-summarizing a new form response and dropping it into Slack without you lifting a finger.
So which one should you actually pick?
You don't need all 25, not even close. Most people I know who use AI tools well stuck to one or two and just got really good with them. If you only do one thing today, pick based on what you're already spending the most time on:
- Need a general assistant for daily writing or thinking out loud — ChatGPT or Claude
- Doing actual research or fact-checking — Perplexity
- Coding daily — Cursor or Copilot
- Need visuals — Midjourney or Framer
- Need video or voice — Synthesia or ElevenLabs
- Building a small business site — Wix or Hostinger
- Drowning in repetitive tasks — Zapier
Wrapping up
None of these tools are magic, and a few of them will probably feel clunky the first time you open them. That's normal. The ones that stick are the ones that quietly fit into something you're already doing not the ones with the flashiest demo video.
If you've found one that's genuinely changed how you work and it's not on this list, drop it in the comments. I'm always looking for the next thing to add to my (already too crowded) bookmarks bar.