Sick of Grok Summarizing Everything? Here's How to Make It Stop
Z
Zack Saadioui
8/13/2025
Sick of Grok Summarizing Everything? Here's How to Make It Stop
Look, we've all been there. You're deep in a chat with Grok, brainstorming, writing, or just messing around, & then it happens. With every new prompt, Grok gives you a little summary of what you've already talked about. It's like having a friend who constantly says, "So, just to recap..." before every single sentence.
Honestly, it can be SUPER annoying & totally break your flow.
Turns out, a lot of people are getting frustrated with this. I've seen the threads on Reddit where users are saying things like, "How do I stop grok from summarising my chat history everytime it answers a prompt?" It seems to be a recent thing, & frankly, it's driving people a little nuts.
So, the big question is, how do you get it to stop? Well, the answer is a little complicated because it depends on what you really mean by "stop summarizing." Do you mean you want to prevent Grok from remembering your past conversations for privacy reasons? Or do you just want it to stop verbally recapping the chat in its responses?
Let's break down both, because they're two different problems with two different solutions.
Solution 1: If You Want Grok to Forget Your Chats (The Privacy Route)
Maybe you're not just annoyed by the summaries; maybe you're concerned about your privacy. You don't want Grok—or X, or any third-party collaborators—to keep a record of your conversations. That's totally fair.
Luckily, there's a straightforward setting for this in the X (formerly Twitter) app. It's a bit buried, but once you know where to look, it's easy.
Here's the step-by-step guide based on a few helpful video tutorials.
Open the X App: Pretty simple, just launch the app on your phone.
Go to Your Profile: Tap on your profile picture in the top-left corner.
Find Settings & Support: Tap on this to expand the menu.
Select Settings & Privacy: This will take you to the main settings page.
Tap on Privacy & Safety: Now you're getting into the nitty-gritty.
Scroll to "Grok & third party collaborators": You'll find this option as you scroll down the Privacy & Safety screen.
Toggle it OFF: Inside this menu, you'll see a switch that says "Allow Grok to remember your conversation history." Just tap it to turn it off.
That's it! Once you do this, Grok won't keep a log of your chats. This is the most effective way to ensure your conversations are private & not stored. You can also manually delete your past chat history from this same area of the settings.
This is a great option for anyone using AI for sensitive topics or who just prefers to keep their data to themselves.
Solution 2: If You Want Grok to Stop Talking About the Summary (The Annoyance Route)
Okay, so maybe you don't mind Grok remembering the context of your conversation. In fact, that's kind of the point of a chatbot, right? The problem is you're tired of it telling you what it remembers. You want it to just answer the prompt without the "Previously on..." intro.
This is where things get a bit more creative because there isn't a simple on/off switch for this behavior. It seems to be a quirk in how Grok is currently programmed. I've seen users on Reddit getting pretty frustrated, with one saying, "It started doing that recently," & another complaining that Grok has "gone haywire."
But here's the good news: you can often fix this with a well-placed custom instruction.
Think of a custom instruction as a behind-the-scenes rule you give the AI to follow for your entire conversation. It's a powerful feature that lets you guide its personality & response style.
One Reddit user found a pretty clever solution that seems to work for many.
Here’s the trick:
Go to Grok's settings & find the "Custom Instructions" section. In the instruction box, you can add a simple phrase like:
"Never summarize unless explicitly asked."
Or, as another user suggested, something a little more casual:
"Be chill—no reflective reframing."
This simple command tells Grok to cut out the recaps. It’s like telling your friend, "Yeah, I was there, you don't need to remind me." Users who have tried this reported that it "completely eliminates the recap addiction."
It might take a little experimenting to find the exact wording that works best for you, but this is your best bet for controlling the summarization habit directly.
Why Does Grok Do This Anyway?
It's hard to say for sure, but this kind of summarization is often a feature, not a bug. For complex, multi-turn conversations, an AI might summarize the context to ensure it's on the right track before generating a new response. It's a way of "showing its work" & confirming it understands the flow of the conversation.
However, it's clear that the execution here is a bit… much. It's not integrated smoothly, & it feels more like a repetitive tic than a helpful feature. Sometimes, an AI model update can cause these weird new behaviors to pop up, as users on Reddit have noticed.
What About Businesses Using AI? This Is Where It Gets Interesting.
This whole situation highlights a HUGE point for businesses looking to use AI for customer service or engagement. You can't have a customer service chatbot that constantly summarizes the conversation. It would be incredibly frustrating for a user who just wants a quick answer.
Imagine a customer asking, "What's your return policy?" & the chatbot replies, "Okay, so you just asked about our return policy. To recap, you want to know how returns work. Here is the information..." It's inefficient & creates a bad user experience.
This is where having more control over your AI is essential. For businesses, you need an AI solution that you can fine-tune & customize to fit your brand's voice & your customers' needs.
This is actually where a platform like Arsturn comes in. Instead of being stuck with the weird quirks of a general-purpose AI, Arsturn lets businesses build their own custom AI chatbots trained on their own data. This means you have complete control over how it interacts with people. You can ensure it's helpful without being annoying, & it stays on-brand. With Arsturn, you can build a no-code AI chatbot that provides instant, personalized customer support, answers questions 24/7, & actually boosts conversions instead of frustrating visitors. It's all about creating a natural, seamless conversation, not a repetitive, robotic one.
So, To Sum It All Up (Pun Intended)
If you're tired of Grok's constant recaps, you have options.
For Privacy: Dive into the X app settings & turn off conversation history. Easy peasy.
For Annoyance: Use a custom instruction like "Never summarize unless explicitly asked" to train the behavior out of Grok.
It's a little bit of a workaround, but it can make your experience with Grok a LOT less frustrating. Hopefully, this is something the developers at xAI will fine-tune in a future update, but until then, these tricks should help you keep your sanity.
Hope this was helpful! Let me know if you find any other custom instructions that work well.