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Grammarly Is Now Superhuman Here’s What’s Really Changing

After 15 years of helping people write better, Grammarly has decided to rewrite something of its own — its name. The company, once known for catching typos and polishing essays, is taking on a much bigger ambition. It’s no longer just about writing assistance. It’s about redefining how people work with AI. Meet Superhuman — the new name, new vision, and new chapter for one of the most familiar productivity brands in tech.

From a Grammar Checker to a Full Productivity Platform

Founded in 2009, Grammarly started as a simple grammar correction tool. Over time, it became a daily companion for millions of professionals, students, and creators — 40 million of them, to be exact.

But as AI began transforming how we write, plan, and communicate, Grammarly’s narrow focus began to feel limiting. So the company made a bold move: bring together its three major tools — Grammarly, Coda, and Superhuman Mail — under one name and one platform.

That platform is Superhuman, an “AI-native productivity suite” designed to quietly work in the background while you focus on what matters. Instead of juggling apps and tabs, the new system integrates writing, planning, and communication into a single intelligent layer that spans your digital workspace.

“Superhuman represents a fundamental shift in how we think about AI at work,” said Shishir Mehrotra, CEO of Superhuman. “The name reflects our belief that AI should amplify human capability — not replace it or make people work around its limitations.”

Introducing Superhuman Go

At the heart of the rebrand is Superhuman Go — a cross-app AI assistant that learns how you work and adapts to it. Unlike most AI tools that need constant prompts, Go works proactively. It can summarise meetings, pull CRM data into emails, draft follow-ups, or file engineering bug reports without switching tabs.

It connects to more than 100 apps, including Google Workspace, Microsoft Outlook, Jira, and Confluence, using modular “agents” — small, specialised AIs built for specific tasks like summarising, scheduling, or retrieving data.

Chief Product Officer Noam Lovinsky explains it simply:

“While other AI tools ask you to change how you work, Go learns how you work and meets you there. It’s the difference between having a tool you remember to use and an AI partner that’s already helping.”

The New Superhuman Suite

The broader Superhuman suite merges Grammarly’s writing tools, Coda’s collaborative workspace, and Superhuman Mail’s powerful inbox. Together, they form a unified productivity ecosystem designed for modern workflows. There’s also a new Agent Store, featuring built-in and partner-developed AIs from companies like Common Room, Fireflies, Latimer, Parallel, Radical Candour, Quizlet, and Speechify. Developers will soon be able to create their own through the Agents SDK, currently in closed beta.

Pricing, Access, and What’s Next

Superhuman’s rebranded suite is already live for paying subscribers through Chrome and Edge extensions, with Mac and Windows apps coming soon.
All Superhuman Go features are free to try until February 1, 2026. This move comes amid a wave of “agent-driven” productivity tools — from Google’s NotebookLM to OpenAI’s workspace integrations — all aiming to blend writing, research, and communication into one seamless workflow.

But while many AI platforms promise efficiency, Superhuman’s bet is a bit different. It’s betting on something more human — that technology’s highest purpose isn’t to replace people, but to help them do their best work effortlessly. And maybe that’s what makes the new name so fitting. Grammarly helped people write better. Superhuman wants to help them work better.

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    Roni Benny is a tech and consumer news reporter at TechMacknews. Before joining the publication in 2025, he worked as a social media marketing specialist, journalist, and tech enthusiast with a deep passion for exploring innovation and digital trends.You can connect with him through his profile for collaborations, news tips, or insights on the latest in technology.

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