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Grammarly goes from fixing typos to giving you a ‘Superhuman’ AI assistant

Your grammar checker just became a productivity partner.

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Grammarly

What’s happened? Grammarly, the tool you probably use to catch that missing comma, has officially rebranded to Superhuman. The company announced the move today alongside a suite of new AI-powered products designed to go far beyond grammar correction.

  • Grammarly is now part of the Superhuman Suite, which combines Grammarly’s core writing engine with Coda (acquired in December 2024) and Superhuman Mail (acquired in June 2025).
  • Meet Superhuman Go: A cross-app AI assistant that works in over 100 apps, can summarize meetings, draft emails, plan schedules, or pull context from other tools automatically.
  • Your old Grammarly assistant remains, but it’s now one part of a unified productivity system.

This is important because: The rebrand isn’t just cosmetic, it signals Grammarly’s leap from writing aid to AI ecosystem.

  • Superhuman Go links writing, scheduling, and communication into one AI system, reducing tab chaos and app fatigue.
  • Superhuman now competes with the likes of Microsoft Copilot and Google Gemini, but positions itself as “AI that works the way you do” rather than forcing you to adapt to the AI.
  • With $1 billion in fresh funding and 40 million daily users, the company is now betting on productivity as the next frontier of AI adoption.
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Why should I care? If you have used Grammarly, you are about to see it evolve into something more like an AI co-worker.

  • You’ll still get writing help, but now your AI can also schedule meetings, reply to emails, and summarize documents.
  • If you’re managing a team or constantly bouncing between tools, Superhuman’s integrations can help you stop switching tabs and start actually working.

Grammarly users can try Superhuman Go now. The Pro plan costs $12/month for multilingual grammar and tone tools, while the Business plan at $33/month adds access to Superhuman Mail.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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