Best AI Tools for Writing SOPs in 2025 — Faster, Cleaner Procedures Without the Pain
We tested six AI tools on the same SOP task. One produced a document an operations team could use the same day. Here’s the full breakdown — with actual prompts you can copy right now.
“Write me a standard operating procedure for onboarding a new client.” That’s what I typed into six different AI tools. What came back ranged from genuinely impressive to completely unusable. This article is the honest account of what happened — and which tools are actually worth your time.
Writing SOPs is one of those tasks that everyone knows they should do and almost nobody actually enjoys doing. You sit down, open a blank document, and then spend the next two hours debating whether step four comes before step five, or whether you even need step four at all. It’s tedious, it’s slow, and it usually ends with a document that nobody on your team reads anyway.
AI has genuinely changed this. Not in a “replace your entire documentation team” kind of way — more in a “cuts the miserable part of the job from four hours to forty minutes” kind of way. But only if you’re using the right tools with the right approach.
That’s the whole point of this guide. I’m not going to walk you through what an SOP is or why they matter — you already know that. You’re here because you want to know which AI tools for writing SOPs actually produce usable output. So let’s get straight to it.
What Makes an AI Actually Good at SOP Writing?
Before I show you the tools, it’s worth knowing what I was actually looking for. Because not every AI writing tool is built the same way, and the things that make a good blog post AI don’t necessarily translate to procedure writing.
A good SOP needs to be specific enough that a new hire can follow it without asking questions. Vague instructions that sound professional but don’t actually tell you what to click or what to do next are the enemy. I’ve read too many SOPs that say something like “ensure the client data is properly processed” — which tells you nothing at all.
So my testing criteria were simple. Each tool got the same prompt. Then I graded the output on three things: how specific the steps were, whether the structure made sense to a first-time reader, and how much editing was required before someone could actually use it.
Every tool received the same base prompt: “Write a standard operating procedure for onboarding a new client to a digital marketing agency. Include roles, steps, and decision points.” Outputs were evaluated on specificity, structure quality, and edit time required before real-world use.
1. ChatGPT — Still the Most Flexible Option
Out of everything I tested, ChatGPT with GPT-4o produced the most immediately usable SOP output — but only when the prompt was structured correctly. The default response to a generic prompt was reasonable but generic. Once I added context about the specific business, the tools involved, and who would be following the procedure, the output jumped significantly in quality.
What ChatGPT does well here is handle complexity. If your SOP has conditional branches — “if the client hasn’t responded in 48 hours, do X; if they have, proceed to Y” — ChatGPT handles that logic cleanly. Most other tools I tested produced linear step lists that ignored edge cases entirely.
The pricing situation is also straightforward. The free version on GPT-3.5 will give you a decent first draft. The $20/month Pro plan with GPT-4o is where the output quality jumps enough to notice. For a business writing SOPs regularly, that’s an easy cost to justify.
Here’s the exact prompt structure that produced the best results in my testing. Copy this, swap out the brackets, and you’ll get a genuinely usable first draft within about three minutes.
2. Notion AI — The Better Choice if Your Team Already Lives in Notion
If your team already stores documentation in Notion — and a lot of teams do — then Notion AI is genuinely worth the extra $10 a month. The AI is embedded directly inside the workspace where your SOPs actually live, which means no copy-pasting between tools and no formatting nightmares when you try to move content around.
The output quality isn’t quite at ChatGPT’s level. The steps tend to be slightly less specific, and it handles complex conditional logic less gracefully. But for most operational SOPs that follow a relatively linear process, the quality gap is small enough that the workflow convenience wins out.
What really sets Notion AI apart for SOP work is the ability to immediately link, tag, and connect the document to your existing knowledge base. You can generate a draft SOP and instantly connect it to your employee handbook, your client folder, or your project templates — all without leaving the app.
3. Claude (Anthropic) — Surprisingly Good at Clarity
Claude surprised me here. I went in expecting it to perform similarly to ChatGPT but it actually has a distinct strength when it comes to SOP writing — the language it uses is genuinely clearer and simpler. Where ChatGPT sometimes produces steps that are technically accurate but slightly jargon-heavy, Claude tends to write the way a patient, clear-thinking senior employee would explain a process to someone new.
The structure isn’t quite as sophisticated as ChatGPT when it comes to conditional logic, but for procedural tasks that are mostly linear, Claude’s output often needs less editing than any other tool I tested. The prose reads more naturally. A new employee following a Claude-written SOP would encounter less friction than one following most alternatives.
One thing to note — Claude’s context window is enormous, which means you can paste in a long, messy existing SOP and ask it to rewrite and improve it. That use case is genuinely powerful and something ChatGPT’s free tier struggles with on longer documents.
4. Scribe — The Only Tool Built Specifically for SOPs
Scribe is completely different from every other tool on this list. It doesn’t generate text from a prompt — it records your screen as you perform a process and automatically turns what you did into a step-by-step SOP with screenshots. This is a fundamentally different approach, and for certain types of SOPs it’s genuinely unbeatable.
If you need to document software processes — how to use your CRM, how to submit an expense report in your accounting system, how to configure a new client account in your project management tool — Scribe is the fastest path from “process in someone’s head” to “documented procedure anyone can follow.” The screenshot-annotated steps are far more useful than text descriptions alone when the SOP involves clicking through a software interface.
Where Scribe falls short is on anything that doesn’t involve a screen. People management SOPs, customer communication procedures, or processes that involve judgment calls and decision-making don’t work here. Scribe captures clicks, not thinking.
Use Scribe and ChatGPT together. Let Scribe handle the screen-recorded steps for the software part of a process. Then use ChatGPT to write the context, decision points, and surrounding instructions. Combine both into one document and you have an SOP that’s genuinely comprehensive.
5. Jasper — Better for Marketing Teams Than Operations Teams
Honest take: Jasper wasn’t designed for SOP writing, and it shows. The outputs read more like polished marketing copy than internal operational documentation. The language is engaging, the structure is clean, but the specificity that SOPs require — the “click here, select this, choose that” level of detail — isn’t really in Jasper’s wheelhouse.
At $39 a month minimum, it’s also significantly more expensive than ChatGPT or Claude for what it delivers in this specific use case. If you’re already using Jasper for your content marketing, you can absolutely use it to generate a basic SOP framework that you then edit heavily. But if SOP writing is the primary goal, there are better and cheaper options on this list.
How They All Stack Up — Side by Side
| Tool | Output Quality | Edit Time | Price/mo | Best Use | Free Plan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ChatGPT (GPT-4o) | 9.1/10 ★ | ~20 min | $0 / $20 | Complex SOPs | ✅ Yes |
| Claude | 8.6/10 | ~18 min | $0 / $20 | Readability | ✅ Yes |
| Notion AI | 8.2/10 | ~25 min | $10 add-on | Team Docs | ❌ No |
| Scribe | 9.4/10* | ~5 min | $0 / $23 | Software SOPs | ✅ Yes |
| Jasper | 6.8/10 | ~45 min | $39+ | Skip for SOPs | ❌ No |
*Scribe score applies only to software/screen-recorded SOPs. For non-screen processes, it’s not applicable.
The Prompts That Actually Work — Copy These
The single biggest variable in AI-generated SOP quality isn’t the tool — it’s the prompt. A detailed prompt in the free version of ChatGPT will outperform a vague prompt in the most expensive tool available. Here are the prompts that produced the best results in my testing.
For Onboarding SOPs
For Improving an Existing SOP
Don’t paste sensitive customer data, employee personal information, or confidential financial details into public AI tools. Use placeholders instead — write [client name] rather than the actual name. The SOP structure doesn’t require real data to be useful.
The Mistakes People Make With AI SOP Writing
I’ve watched people use these tools for the first time and the same mistakes come up repeatedly. The biggest one is treating AI output as a finished product. It isn’t. No AI tool produces an SOP you can hand to an employee without reviewing it first. Things like your specific software interface, your company-specific terminology, and the exceptions that only your experienced team members know about — none of that makes it into an AI-generated SOP unless you put it there.
The second mistake is using a generic prompt and then being disappointed with a generic result. “Write me an SOP for customer service” will give you a document that applies to every customer service team and none of them specifically. Add details. Name the tools. Specify the role. Describe the exceptions. The more specific your input, the more specific and useful the output.
The third mistake is not having the person who actually does the job review the draft. AI is good at structure and language. It doesn’t know that step six only applies on Tuesdays, or that the system times out after two minutes of inactivity and you need to save your work before that happens. The person doing the task catches those things. Build in a review step.
Frequently Asked Questions
🏆 Bottom Line
Start with ChatGPT and the prompt structure above — it’s free, it’s flexible, and the output is genuinely usable. If your SOPs involve software processes, add Scribe to your stack. If your team lives in Notion, the $10 AI add-on pays for itself in the first week. Just don’t skip the human review step. The AI gets you 80% of the way there fast. The last 20% is where your actual expertise makes the document real.
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