Grammarly has officially rebranded to Superhuman, following its acquisition of the popular AI-powered email client earlier this year — a bold move that marks a new chapter for the company as it evolves from a writing tool into a broader AI productivity ecosystem.
The rebrand, announced this week, means the parent company will now operate under the name Superhuman, though its flagship product, Grammarly, will retain its original name for now. According to the company, this shift reflects its long-term ambition to integrate its growing suite of productivity platforms — including Coda, which it acquired last year — under a unified AI-powered brand identity.
Alongside the rebrand, Superhuman introduced a new AI assistant called Superhuman Go, built directly into Grammarly’s existing browser extension. The assistant can generate context-aware writing suggestions, give real-time feedback on tone and clarity, and connect with popular workplace tools such as Gmail, Google Drive, Google Calendar, and Jira to handle everyday tasks. For example, users can ask it to log a Jira ticket, check their meeting availability, or draft polished emails in seconds.
Superhuman says users can activate the feature by toggling it on in the Grammarly extension and connecting it to their preferred apps. The company is also expanding its Agent Store, offering specialized tools like a plagiarism checker and a proofreader launched earlier in August.
To access the new assistant, users can choose between two plans:
- Pro Plan ($12/month billed annually): Offers advanced grammar and tone support in multiple languages.
- Business Plan ($33/month billed annually): Includes access to Superhuman Mail, the company’s enhanced email platform.
Superhuman also revealed plans to bring more AI-powered capabilities to its Coda document suite and Superhuman email clients, enabling them to pull details from internal systems and external sources to automatically enrich emails and documents with relevant data.
Over the years, Grammarly — now Superhuman — has steadily evolved beyond its original grammar-checking roots. With this latest rebrand and product expansion, the company is positioning itself to compete directly with Notion, ClickUp, and Google Workspace, all of which are racing to integrate advanced generative AI features into their platforms.
As Superhuman steps into this new era, it’s clear the company isn’t just helping users write better — it’s redefining how professionals think, collaborate, and communicate in the age of AI.
