The image features a cracked and broken teal-colored circular logo with a white arrow forming a loop, resembling a refresh or recycle icon. Two other similar but less distinct broken logos are visible behind it. Above, a white icon resembling a person with a small circle above their head is shown, along with the white text "SUPERHUMAN". The background is a gradient of dark purple, blue, and light purple, with faint geometric lines. The "UNBOX DIARIES" logo is at the top right. A yellow banner at the bottom announces "Grammarly changes name to Superhuman and introduces new AI tools". Social media icons and text are present at the very bottom.

Grammarly changes name to Superhuman and introduces new AI tools

Grammarly has officially changed its name to Superhuman. The move signals a major shift from being a writing assistant to becoming a full AI powered productivity platform.

Grammarly changes name to Superhuman and introduces new AI tools

What Is New

Superhuman brings together several tools under one system. This includes Grammarly’s original writing assistant, the workspace tool Coda, the Superhuman email client, and a new AI assistant called Superhuman Go.

Grammarly changes name to Superhuman and introduces new AI tools

Superhuman Go is the star feature. It works across apps, browser tabs and email. It can help draft messages, summarize content, suggest tasks and handle scheduling based on what users are doing in real time.

Instead of correcting sentences in one app, the new Superhuman system is designed to help users write, organize tasks, and manage communication across their workflow.

Why This Matters

Grammarly has mainly been known for checking grammar, fixing tone, and improving writing style. Now the goal is to support the entire work process. This means handling writing, email, documents, tasks and calendars together.

Work is no longer confined to a single application. We jump between email, chat, notes and tasks every day. A tool that sees all of this and helps manage it can reduce time wasted switching between apps and help users stay focused.

Existing Grammarly users will still see familiar writing features. Now they will also see new tools that allow deeper integration across the Superhuman platform.

Superhuman Go is currently included in paid plans and will be free for Grammarly users until February 1, 2026.

This shift puts Superhuman in the same ring as Microsoft 365, Google Workspace and other AI productivity platforms.

Privacy will be a major question. Since the assistant can work across multiple apps, users will want to understand how it handles data and how much access it has.

Another challenge is performance. Many companies promise a unified AI work experience, but delivering reliable and seamless support across email, documents and tasks is extremely difficult.

Long term pricing and how well users adapt to the new workflow will likely determine how successful Superhuman becomes.

Do you trust AI tools to edit your writing accurately?

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