Grammarly is Now Superhuman

Grammarly Rebrands to Superhuman and Launches New AI Assistant

Grammarly has officially rebranded as Superhuman, marking a major shift in its identity after acquiring the popular email client earlier this year. While the company name changes, its flagship writing product will continue to be called Grammarly for now.

The rebrand comes as part of Grammarly’s broader strategy to evolve from a writing assistant into a full productivity platform. The company has also hinted at possible future rebrands for its other acquisitions, including Coda, a document collaboration suite.

Superhuman Go: The New AI Writing Assistant

Alongside the rebrand, Superhuman has launched Superhuman Go, a new AI-powered assistant built into the existing Grammarly extension. The assistant can refine writing, provide real-time feedback, and integrate with multiple third-party tools.

Users can connect Superhuman Go with apps like Gmail, Google Drive, Google Calendar, and Jira. With these integrations, the AI can perform actions such as logging tickets, checking schedules, or pulling relevant context while drafting an email.

The company also plans to expand the assistant’s capabilities further by allowing it to pull data from CRMs and internal systems, making it even more powerful for business users.

How to Try Superhuman Go

Superhuman Go is available to all Grammarly users through a simple toggle in the Grammarly extension. Turning it on enables users to connect the assistant to various apps.

There’s also an Agent Store, where users can explore different AI agents such as a proofreader or a plagiarism checker, both launched earlier this year.

Subscription Plans and Pricing

Superhuman is offering several pricing tiers. The Pro plan costs $12 per month (billed annually) and supports grammar and tone checking across multiple languages. For teams, the Business plan costs $33 per month (billed annually) and includes access to Superhuman Mail, the company’s premium email client.

Expanding Beyond Writing

Superhuman says it is working to add more AI-driven capabilities to its entire product ecosystem. The company plans to enhance Coda and its email clients with features that can automatically fetch and insert relevant details into emails or documents.

These upgrades are part of Superhuman’s long-term goal to compete with platforms like Notion, ClickUp, and Google Workspace, all of which have introduced AI-powered tools in recent years.

A Step Toward the Future of Productivity

With this rebrand and product launch, Superhuman is signaling a new phase — one where writing, communication, and productivity blend seamlessly with AI. The move also positions the company to take on larger productivity ecosystems by embedding intelligence directly into everyday workflows.

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