Grammarly, one of the most widely used AI writing assistants, is officially changing its name to Superhuman as part of a major rebrand. The move follows the company’s acquisitions of Superhuman Mail in June and Coda in December 2024, uniting all three under a single Superhuman platform that focuses on AI-driven productivity.

Starting today, the new Superhuman suite will include Coda, Superhuman Mail, Grammarly, and a new AI assistant called Superhuman Go. All tools will be available to users with a Grammarly Pro subscription, with Superhuman Go free to access until February 1, 2026. The company has not yet confirmed pricing beyond that date.
Superhuman’s new interface will feel familiar to Grammarly users, featuring a sidebar for writing suggestions, prompts, and now AI-powered agents that connect across more than 100 apps. The platform aims to help users handle broader tasks, such as scheduling meetings, summarizing documents, and drafting messages based on information from connected databases.
According to Noam Lovinsky, chief product officer at Superhuman, the Grammarly brand will still exist but play a smaller role as the company focuses on becoming a full AI productivity platform. “It’s a really complicated and frankly scary thing,” Lovinsky said in an interview with The Verge. “But the reality is, the Grammarly brand isn’t going anywhere.”
Superhuman Go serves as the centerpiece of this transformation. It builds on Grammarly’s existing AI assistant, offering a wider range of capabilities beyond writing. The platform also introduces the Superhuman Agent Store, where users can access AI tools tailored for specific apps such as Google Workspace and Microsoft Outlook.
The rebrand marks a clear shift in focus from writing assistance to a more integrated AI productivity experience, positioning Superhuman as a direct competitor to platforms like Notion AI and ChatGPT’s enterprise tools.

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