Writing
Thesis Statement Builder
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A thesis statement builder gives you arguable, structured templates that turn a topic into the single claim an essay defends. Enter a subject and it offers proven thesis shapes — the concession-plus-claim, the because-driven argument, the reframing move, the cost-benefit position — each with bracketed slots for your stance, reasons, and evidence. Students and writers use it to escape the vague topic sentence, build a thesis with built-in roadmap, and make sure their claim is actually arguable rather than a statement of fact. A thesis is the most important sentence in an essay: it announces your position and previews how you will support it, and a weak one undermines everything that follows. Pick a frame that matches your argument, then fill the brackets with your real claim and reasons. The strongest thesis says something a reasonable person could disagree with, and then earns it.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter your essay topic.
- Choose how many thesis templates you want.
- Pick a frame that matches your argument.
- Fill the brackets with your claim and reasons.
Use Cases
- •Turning a topic into a single arguable claim
- •Escaping the vague, fact-stating topic sentence
- •Building a thesis with a built-in roadmap
- •Drafting and comparing several thesis angles
- •Teaching what makes a thesis arguable
Tips
- →Make sure a reasonable person could disagree.
- →Preview your main reasons in the thesis itself.
- →Keep it to one or two sentences.
- →Revise the thesis as your argument develops.
FAQ
what makes a thesis arguable
A thesis must state something a reasonable person could dispute, not a fact everyone accepts. If no one could argue the other side, it is a topic statement, not a thesis. These frames build in a claim and reasons so your position is genuinely contestable.
how do i fill in the brackets
Each template leaves slots for your stance, your reasons, and your evidence. Replace [your claim] with the position you will defend and [reason one] and [reason two] with the support, and the frame becomes a thesis that previews your whole essay.
where should the thesis go
Usually at the end of your introduction, after you have set up the topic. Placing it there lets the reader know your argument before the body begins, and each body paragraph can then trace back to one part of the thesis.
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