SureVett is a free Chrome extension that scores Amazon products on six review-trust signals and shows you an A–F grade with the reasoning behind it. We surface signals, not certainty — real fake-review detection in 2026 means being honest about what automated tools can and can't catch.
Works with Chrome, Brave, and Edge
Add SureVett to Chrome from the Web Store. Free, no signup required.
Browse products as usual. SureVett works automatically in the background.
Get A-F trust grades right on the page with full reasoning behind every score.
Chrome Extension
Available nowiPhone + Safari
Coming soonAmazon App (Share)
Coming soonAI-generated fake reviews are growing roughly 80% month-over-month.
Fakespot — the tool Mozilla reported 10 million people relied on — shut down on July 1, 2025. The replacements have been a mixed bag at best: some give every product the same score, some quietly inject affiliate tags into your Amazon URLs. The FTC started enforcing its Consumer Review Rule in December 2025 with fines up to $53,088 per violation, but enforcement is slow and the fakes keep getting better, which makes the red flags worth knowing.
SureVett exists to give Chrome users back a trust grade they can actually read, with the reasoning behind it.
SureVett was built by Nathan Hart, a former AWS engineer who testified before the Department of Justice in a federal fraud case. The trust-verification instinct from that work is built into how SureVett evaluates reviews.
No ads, no tracking, no data sold to third parties, no affiliate links on Amazon. The full privacy policy explains exactly what data SureVett does and doesn't touch.
SureVett shows the reasoning behind every trust grade across six signals: rating distribution (J-curve), verified purchase ratio, review velocity, review count, seller trust, and brand and product signals. Each signal shows its score and a plain-English explanation of what SureVett saw.
SureVett is built to see as little about you as possible.
Trust grades are computed on the page you're already viewing, from public review data: rating distribution (the "J-curve"), verified-purchase ratio, review velocity, review age, seller, and brand signals. No AI service and no server ever sees the reviews you read.
SureVett works fully without signing in. If you choose to sign in with Google, your checked products, their computed scores, and the prices you encounter sync to SureVett's backend to power shared caching and price history. It never sends your review text, your browsing history, or a behavioral profile.
SureVett doesn't follow you around the web or use tracking cookies.
SureVett only requests access to the retail sites it supports (Amazon today), not "all websites."
Deeper AI text analysis of individual reviews is on the roadmap. When it ships, we'll say exactly what's sent and where.
SureVett is a free Chrome extension that detects fake Amazon reviews with statistical signal analysis. It assigns A–F trust grades directly on product pages and shows the reasoning behind each score across six signals: rating distribution (the J-curve test), verified purchase ratio, review velocity, review count, seller trust, and brand and product signals. SureVett was built by Nathan Hart, a former AWS engineer who testified before the Department of Justice in a federal fraud case. It launched in 2026 as a replacement for Fakespot, which Mozilla shut down on July 1, 2025. Deeper AI text analysis of individual reviews is on the roadmap.
Join thousands of shoppers who never fall for fake reviews.
Add to Chrome — Free