A tested, ranked list of the AI tools that actually work for journalism. Updated monthly based on real use, not hype.
We tested 644 AI tools for reporting stories and writing articles. The picks below passed three filters: (1) actually works in production, (2) pricing is reasonable for journalism, (3) reviews from real users, not paid placements.
Claude is the model we use most for reporting stories and writing articles. It reads long documents without losing context, gives feedback that pushes back when you're wrong, and stays focused on the actual question. Pricing starts at $20/month for the Pro plan.
ChatGPT is the most versatile. For journalism it covers brainstorming, drafting, image generation (via GPT Image 2), and quick research. The Plus plan at $20/month is enough for most users. Free tier works for evaluation.
If reporting stories and writing articles needs visuals, Midjourney v7 produces the most cinematic, photographic output of any AI image tool in 2026. Pricing is $10/month for the Basic plan. Worth it for hero images, mockups, and brand assets.
ElevenLabs is the only AI voice tool that sounds like a real person. The prosody and breathing are natural. For journalism that needs voiceovers, training materials, or audio content, this is the standard. Free tier available; paid plans start at $5/month.
Perplexity replaces Google for research. It cites sources, summarizes across multiple articles, and answers follow-up questions. For reporting stories and writing articles where accuracy matters, this is the safest AI tool. Free tier works; Pro is $20/month.
If journalism involves any custom tooling or scripting, Cursor is the fastest AI code editor. It reads your whole codebase context, generates code that matches your style, and handles multi-file refactors. Pro plan is $20/month.
n8n is open-source workflow automation. For reporting stories and writing articles, it replaces Zapier at 1/10th the cost and adds AI nodes as first-class citizens. Self-hosted for free, or $24/month for cloud.
None of these tools are perfect. Claude hallucinates on niche facts. ChatGPT is overly agreeable on creative work. Midjourney struggles with text in images. ElevenLabs still sounds synthetic on edge cases. Perplexity's free tier is rate-limited. Cursor requires you to know what you want. n8n has a learning curve.
The right answer is to pick 2-3 of these based on your actual workflow, not subscribe to all 7. Most journalism we know use Claude + one specialty tool (Midjourney or ElevenLabs or n8n).
Total monthly cost for the recommended stack: ~$60-80/month for the paid plans. Free tiers exist for all of them if you're just starting. Most journalism recoup this in the first week of saved time.
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